The Institutes of the Law of Nations: A Treatise of the Jural Relations of Separate Political Communities, 1. ciltThe Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2005 - 1107 sayfa Originally published: Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons, 1883, 1884. Two vols. xviii, 449; xx, 620 pp. Critical of utilitarianism, Lorimer proposed a system of public international law based on the law of nature. It is most notable, however, for its elitism, racism and support of colonialism. Since he believed in a hierarchy of nations based on cultural attainment, he rejected the principle of comity in international relations as a sufficient basis for international law. He used this point to defend the right of "civilized" nations to ignore the sovereignty of their "primitive" counterparts. Influential in Europe, this treatise offered a sophisticated argument that stoked the ambitions of continental imperialists. James Lorimer [1818-1890] was Regius Professor of Public Law at the University of Edinburgh and a founder of the Institute of International Law. |
Kitabın içinden
41 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa ix
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations , ( C ) The realisation of the freedom of separate nations by the reciprocal assertion and recognition of their real powers , Divisions- • I. In relation to its objects , the Law of Nations ...
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations , ( C ) The realisation of the freedom of separate nations by the reciprocal assertion and recognition of their real powers , Divisions- • I. In relation to its objects , the Law of Nations ...
Sayfa 2
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations . : Lastly we discovered the arrangements of nature to be such that no created entity can realise its freedom in isolation . Freedom and independence , though so often confounded , are so ...
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations . : Lastly we discovered the arrangements of nature to be such that no created entity can realise its freedom in isolation . Freedom and independence , though so often confounded , are so ...
Sayfa 3
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations by the reciprocal assertion and recognition of their real powers . Accepting this , in the meantime , then , as the definition of our subject , let us inquire into its natural or scientific ...
... realisation of the freedom of separate nations by the reciprocal assertion and recognition of their real powers . Accepting this , in the meantime , then , as the definition of our subject , let us inquire into its natural or scientific ...
Sayfa 6
... realisation of Natural Law in the concrete , as shall render this doctrine more and more exhaustive . It is with a view to this progress that the abnormal relations of States , in so far as they are necessary or inevitable , receive ...
... realisation of Natural Law in the concrete , as shall render this doctrine more and more exhaustive . It is with a view to this progress that the abnormal relations of States , in so far as they are necessary or inevitable , receive ...
Sayfa 10
... realisation of Dante's dream of a universal empire - of the Leviathan again , though of a nobler Leviathan , with higher aims than the mere suppression of internecine war . Its effect in international law would be precisely analogous to ...
... realisation of Dante's dream of a universal empire - of the Leviathan again , though of a nobler Leviathan , with higher aims than the mere suppression of internecine war . Its effect in international law would be precisely analogous to ...
İçindekiler
182 | |
188 | |
4th The form of government or the manner in which the materials | 203 |
OF PARTIAL RECOGNITION | 216 |
OF THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN NORMAL AND | 223 |
2d Abnormal antijural relations by the law of nations between | 226 |
OF POLITICAL INTERCOURSE OF LEGATION | 236 |
OF POLITICAL INTERCOURSEcontinued | 269 |
87 | |
93 | |
101 | |
104 | |
113 | |
126 | |
132 | |
139 | |
151 | |
152 | |
165 | |
OF MERCANTILE INTERCOURSE | 287 |
General instructions for her Majestys consuls issued by the Secretary | 300 |
Consular treaty between France and Italy | 316 |
4th Of the executive capacity of the State | 330 |
6th Of the exceptional position of criminal judgments | 332 |
2d The difficulty of throwing criminal courts open to foreign pro | 339 |
NoteResolutions of the Institute on the subject of Extradition | 345 |
The fundamental propositions of private international law | 370 |
Diversity of circumstances does not always exclude assimilation | 377 |
The determination of the temporal limits of rules of law belongs | 393 |
RELATIONS OF MUTUAL AID | 445 |
Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
ab intestat abnormal relations accept action agents apply arms army authority Baron Lambermont belligerent belong Bluntschli captured casus belli CHAPTER character circumstances citizens civilised claim colonies Conference consequently Consuls Convention Court declaration delegate doctrine of recognition domicile droit enemy enforced England enlist entitled ethical executive exercise existence extent fact force foreign France freedom Grotius ground guerre hostile human impossible individual intervention jural jural relations jurisdiction jurisprudence jurists law of nations laws of war legal relations legislation lex domicilii limits Majesty means ment military municipal law natural law necessity neutral object offence officers opinion parties peace permanent person political positive law possession present principle prisoners prisoners of war private international law Prize province punishment question race realisation regards respect result rights and duties rule Savigny separate ship territory tion trade treaty ultimate United Kingdom whilst
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