The Legal Basis for Using Principles in WTO Disputes
In: Journal of international economic law, Volume 10, Issue 4, p. 795-835
ISSN: 1464-3758
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In: Journal of international economic law, Volume 10, Issue 4, p. 795-835
ISSN: 1464-3758
In: European journal of international law, Volume 17, Issue 5, p. 985-1008
ISSN: 1464-3596
In: Journal of international economic law, Volume 4, Issue 4, p. 683-723
ISSN: 1464-3758
In: POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY QUARTERLY, Volume 11, Issue 2, p. 152--169
A NARRATIVE ACCOUNT OF THE HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF STRUGGLE IS DEVELOPED SHOWING THAT LOCATIONAL CONFLICT IS SYMBOLIC CONFLICT OVER THE CONSTRUCTION OF MEANINGS WITHIN PARTICULAR LANDSCAPES. THE CONGRUENCE OF ISSUES IN BERKELEY, AND CENTERED AROUND THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, UNDERSCORES THE COMPLEXITY, AS WELL AS THE IMPORTANCE, OF THE SYMBOLIC NATURE OF CONFLICT OVER THE USE AND CONTROL OF SPACE. THIS PAPER REVOLVES AROUND THE NOTION THAT USING PUBLIC SPACE AS A POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND SHELTER BASE BY THOSE EXCLUDED FROM THE DECISION-MAKING PROCESS IS UNDERSTOOD BY THOSE PEOPLE AS A LEGITIMATE AND RIGHTFUL USE OF PUBLIC SPACE.
In: Politics: Australasian Political Studies Association journal, Volume 16, Issue 2, p. 273-275
This paper criticizes McChesney's (1990) hypothesis that the decisions to initially and subsequently terminate American Indian allotment were based on the Bureau of Indian Affairs' (BIA) interest to inflate their budget. By adopting a richer database on the BIA appropriations from 1877-1945 and correcting for model specification problems, I find no empirical evidence supporting any of McChesney's hypotheses concerning the bureaucratic demand for regulatory change. In fact, other large budgetary items, such as New Deal relief funding, Court of Claims judgments, and educational spending, crowded out BIA land management appropriations over these years. Interestingly, a cursory overview of this period illustrates how the BIA fought for less, rather than more, administrative control over Indian affairs.
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Cover -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- List of Contributors -- 1 Why We Need to Know About Sanitation in the Past -- 2 Assessing the Impact of Sanitation upon Health in Early Human Populations from Hunter-gatherers to Ancient Civilisations, Using Theoretical Modelling -- 3 Waste Management in Early Urban Southern Mesopotamia -- 4 Latrines and Wastewater Sanitation Technologies in Ancient Greece -- 5 A Tale of Two Cities: The Efficacy of Ancient and Medieval Sanitation Methods -- 6 Sewers, Cesspits and Middens: A Survey of the Evidence for 2000 Years of Waste Disposal in York, UK -- 7 Human Intestinal Parasites and Dysentery in Africa and the Middle East Prior to 1500 -- 8 Parasitism, Cesspits and Sanitation in East Asian Countries Prior to Modernisation -- 9 New World Paleoparasitology -- 10 Parasites in European Populations from Prehistory to the Industrial Revolution -- 11 A First Attempt to Retrace the History of Dysentery Caused by Entamoeba histolytica -- 12 A Better Understanding of Sanitation and Health in the Past -- Bibliography -- Index.
In: International economic law series
Introduction / M Sornarajah -- Good faith as a general principle of (international) law / Andreas R Ziegler and Jorun Baumgartner -- Good faith in treaty interpretation / Eric de Brabandere and Isabelle Van Damme -- Good faith in parallel trade and investment disputes / Tania Voon, Andrew D Mitchell, and James Munro -- Good faith limitations on protected investments and corporate structuring / Stephan W Schill and Heather L Bray -- Good faith, corporate nationality, and denial of benefits / M Sornarajah -- Good faith and fair equitable treatment in international investment law / Martins Paparinskis -- Conclusion / Andrew D Mitchell and Tania Voon
In: The archaeology of colonialism in native North America
This book is a pioneering contribution to the history of the founding of the West German political system after the Second World War. The political cooperation between Catholics and Protestants that resulted in the formation of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in occupied and early West Germany represented a significant change from a long history of hostility in confessional relations. Given that the CDU went on to dominate politics in West Germany well into the 1960s, Maria D. Mitchell argues that an understanding of what made this interconfessional party possible is crucial to an exploration of German history in the postwar period. She examines the political history of party formation as well as the religious beliefs and motivations that shaped the party's philosophy and positions. She provides an authoritative guide to the complex processes of maneuvering and negotiation that produced the CDU during 1945-46. The full range of political possibilities is discussed, including the suppressed alternatives to the Adenauer/Erhard axis that eventually defined the party's trajectory during the 1950s and the abortive Christian Socialism associated with Jacob Kaiser
In: Cambridge studies in international and comparative law
In: Cambridge studies in philosophy and biology