1 sheet ([1] p.) ; Caption title. ; Initial letter. ; Intentional blank spaces in text. ; Dated: Given under Our Signet at Edinburgh, the twenty sixth day of February, and of Our Reign the sixth year, 1695. ; Signed: Gilb: Eliot, Cls. Sti. Concilii. ; Reproduction of the original in the National Library of Scotland.
1 sheet ([1] p.) ; Caption title. ; Initial letter. ; Intentional blank spaces in text. ; Dated: Given under Our Signet at Edinburgh, the fifth day of Aprile. And of Our Reign the fourth year 1693. ; Signed: Gilb. Eliot, Cls Sti. Concilii. ; Reproduction of the original in the National Library of Scotland.
1 sheet ([1] p.) ; Caption title. ; Royal arms at head of text; initial letter. ; Intentional blank spaces in text. ; Dated: Given under Our Signet at Edinburgh, the twelfth day of November, and of Our Reign the eighth year, 1696. ; Signed: Gilb. Eliot Cls. Sti. Concilii. ; Reproduction of the original in the National Library of Scotland.
The purpose of this article is a more thorough examination of the specifics of the legal status of women investigators at the present stage. The main content of the study is an analysis of the regulatory framework regarding the status of a particular category of women who have decided to link their fate with military service. The article concludes with a number of proposals, the implementation of which would only improve the legal status of women military personnel.
In: Canadian journal of economics and political science: the journal of the Canadian Political Science Association = Revue canadienne d'économique et de science politique, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 357-370
The political and administrative Control of the Canadian military forces by the Government of Canada during the First World War, 1914–19, presented several novel problems to the Canadian system of cabinet government. A detailed examination of the relations between the Government of the Dominion (a clean word in 1916), as represented by the Prime Minister and the Cabinet, and the military organization overseas, as represented by its chief staff officers, is useful to students of both cabinet government and public administration. This paper seeks to throw light on two facets of these political-military relations: first, the problem of making cabinet control effective over an army physically separated from Canada by geographical distance and relatively primitive communications; second, that of the extent to which effective political control over an army establishment beyond her borders enhanced the de facto meaning of dominion status.In 1919 dominion status did not mean quite what it had come to mean in 1931. On the whole the control over high matters of war and peace lay beyond the powers of the Government of Canada. The British North America Act, 1867, had not foreseen the possibility that the advisors of the Governor General should assume control over the conduct of a great war. Even if it had been appropriate for Sir Robert Borden or his colleagues to direct policy in war, Parliament appeared to lack the power to legislate beyond the shores of Canada. When, after two years of war, Canada had placed a substantial army overseas, it became necessary to alter constitutional practice to fit the new facts produced by the war. This effort was considerably to modify the meaning of dominion status.
Information on the recruitment system, length, conditions and training of military service in Vietnam in general, but more specifically on conditions of military service of Vietnamese personnel in Cambodia: military structure in each unit there and of the commanding unit, cooperation and conflict with Cambodians in combat and civil life, methods of fighting, forms of resistance encountered, arms and food supply of the army. Vietnamese settlement in Cambodia. Foreign advisers in Cambodia. Desertion to Thailand, its causes and conditions, expectations of deserters, bases of decision-making before desertion. The information was gained by interviewing 75 army deserters living in camps in Thailand between January and March 1986. Questionnaire used in the appendix. (DÜI-Ptk)
On April 7, 1939, the Italian news agency, Stefani, announced officially that Italian troops had landed in Albania. Having overcome some resistance, they entered Tirana, the capital, the following day and then rapidly completed the occupation of the country. An attempt at legal justification followed this military action. The Italian press announced that after the landing of troops an Albanian provisional committee, quickly formed, convoked an Assembly composed of delegates from all Albanian provinces. On April 12, 1939, this Assembly, having vested itself with full powers, declared the decadence of the preceding régime and offered the crown of Albania to the king of Italy. The Italian law of April 16, 1939, n. 580, declared that the king of Italy, having accepted the crown of Albania, assumed for himself and for his successors the title of King of Italy and Albania, Emperor of Ethiopia. Then followed a series of measures legally entrusting Italy with full control over Albania.