Instruments of Peacemaking 1870-1914
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Table of Contents -- List of Maps -- Table of Cases -- Table of Statutes -- Table of Parliamentary and State Papers -- Table of Treaties and Conventions -- Introduction: A Utopian Dream? -- 1. Approaches to InternationalDispute Resolution -- I. Resolving Disputes between States: Influences on Policy Making -- II. The Nineteenth Century Approach -- III. Approach to Arbitration -- 2. The Geneva Arbitration -- I. The Anglo-American Relationship 1782-1861 -- II. How the Claims Arose -- III. The Diplomatic Negotiations Regarding the Treaty of Washington and the Tribunal's Terms of Reference, the Arguments of the Parties -- IV. The Claims -- V. Constitution of the Tribunal and the Proceedings -- VI. The Case of the United States -- VII. The Case of Britain -- VIII. Final Award of the Arbitrators -- IX. Sir Alexander Cockburn's Dissenting Award -- X. The Foreign Enlistment Act 1819 -- XI. Results of the Arbitration and Effect -- XII. Diplomatic Reflections on the American Civil War -- XIII. Lessons of the Geneva Arbitration -- 3. Forms of Dispute Resolution as Instruments of Prevention: Part I -- I. The Behring Sea Arbitration -- II. The Anglo-Venezuela Arbitration -- 4. Forms of Dispute Resolution as Instruments of Prevention: Part II -- I. The Pious Fund Case -- II. The Dogger Bank Inquiry -- III. The Panama Canal Dispute -- IV. The Casablanca Case -- 5. Towards a Code of International Arbitration: Instruments of Peace and Diplomacy -- I. Evolution of an International Law to Resolve Disputes between States -- II. Anglo-American Treaty Discussions -- III. The Influence of American Jurists -- IV. The Hague Conference and Convention 1899 -- V. An International Court of Arbitration -- VI. The Inquiry Process -- VII. The Permanent Court of Arbitration -- VIII. Second Hague Peace Conference.