Koleksi Elektronik
Seizure of Territory: The Stimson Doctrine and Related Principles in Legal Theory and Diplomatic Practice
This book discusses the non-recognition principle of territorial changes, the legal aspects of non-recognition, and the diplomatic practice of the last decade. The book consists of 25 chapters about the historical survey of territorial change in Europe during 1792-1878, Europe during 1878-1914, Eastern Europe during 1914-1918, the birth of Baltic States, the Soviet-Polish and the Soviet-Rumanian Border dispute between two World Wars, the attitude of the United States until 1932, the non-recognition idea in the Americas prior to 1932, the League of Nations on Article X of the Covenant and the non-recognition idea before 1932, the Manchurian Incident, the Stimson Notes and the League Assembly Resolution on March 1932, the Chaco Declaration and the Leticia Dispute, the League Recommendations on Manchuria, and the Litvinos Conventions, Inter-American Conferences and Treaties during 1933-1938, Jurists' Drafts during 1934-1939, the Acts of Havana and Chapultepec, the Atlantic Charter and the Cairo Declaration, the United Nations Charter, the legal aspects of non-recognition such as non-recognition as a legal duty, its legal implications, de jure and de facto recognition, withdrawal of recognition, returning sovereign, and the termination of non-recognition, and the diplomatic practice during 1934-1946 in the Far East, Ethiopia, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Albania, and Soviet expansion, This book is suitable for research on territory changes and non-recognition principle in Europe before the 1950s.
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