Hauptbeschreibung: Dieses Handbuch stellt das Verfassungsprozessrecht im Freistaat Sachsen systematisch und unter Berücksichtigung der veröffentlichten Urteile des Verfassungsgerichtshofes dar. Es ermöglicht sowohl dem Praktiker einen schnellen Zugriff auf die Probleme des Verfassungsprozessrechts, als auch Lehre, Forschung und Ausbildung die vertiefte Auseinandersetzung mit dem Verfassungsgerichtshof des Freistaates Sachsen. Dr. Michael Haas ist Sozius der Rechtsanwaltskanzlei in Dresden. Er war als parlamentarischer Berater an der Erarbeitung der Sächsischen Verfassung und des
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A president without a good lawyer -- Crimes of aggression -- Crimes committed in the conduct of war -- Crimes committed in the treatment of prisoners -- Crimes committed in the postwar occupations -- Tribunals for war crimes prosecution -- The Bush administration's war crimes liability
This provocative analysis of U.S. relations with Cambodia from the 1950s to the present illuminates foreign policy issues that remain especially pertinent in the aftermath of the Cold War, as we attempt to formulate new approaches to a changed but still threatening international situation. Based on interviews with more than 100 diplomats, journalists, and scholars who have been involved with the Cambodian peace process, Michael Haas' book brings to light new information on a complex chain of events and casts doubt on official accounts of U.S. policies toward Cambodia.||Haas sorts through the t
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A detailed, scholarly reassessment of developments in Cambodia since December 25, 1978, when Vietnamese combat soldiers expelled the ruthless Pol Pot regime. Genocide by Proxy is an account of a country at war and of a people consigned to the role of pawn in world politics. Michael Haas contends that Cambodia became an arena for superpower conflict and thus could only find peace when the superpowers extricated themselves from the country. In providing perhaps the best explanation of the causes of the Cambodian tragedy, Haas exposes the narcissism that reigns when one state forces another to be.
A new type of international cooperation has arisen in Asia—economic cooperation between provinces of adjacent countries. While the principal motivation is joint economic development, the peace dividend involves cooperation among the people across borders to establish and strength ties of friendship. Although much funding comes from private investment, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has been instrumental in identifying many of the most feasible projects. This article identifies one proposed growth triangle, a few that are dormant, and some currently are in operation, providing their historical origins, organizational components, funding, and success in conducting operational projects or promoting peaceful relations among members. To determine which projects have been more successful, variables are identified from the viable projects, testing whether criteria from the rational choice paradigm give a better explanation of success than the community-building paradigm. Results indicate that the two paradigms explain quite different aspects of success. Consistent with the rational choice paradigm, success is more likely when 'growth area' organizations have more funding and support from the ADB. As predicted by the community building paradigm, successful 'growth area' organizations have support from the leaders of their respective countries and are composed of countries with rough equality in national income. One variable—whether countries involved are democracies—has little impact on either economic development or peace dividend success.
Racial harmony is a form of positive peace, unlike the negative racial peace that exists when there is only racial coexistence. The paper focuses on how the racism pervading the Territory of Hawaiˋi was transformed into the harmonious life in the State of Hawaiˋi by focusing on five forms of racism—cultural, political, economic, environmental, and institutional. The transformation is explained by several theories—operational code theory, political displacement theory, mass society theory, ecological theory, and affirmative action theory. Progress in advancing over times is explained in terms of the Mass Society Paradigm. Although a unique historical account, the paper indicates in theoretical term how a transformation during statehood prompted progress.