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The law of nations and the New World
L. C. Green and Olive Patricia Dickason
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Frontmatter
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Introduction (TIMOTHY J. CHRISTIAN, page vii)
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Claims to Territory in Colonial America (L. C. GREEN, page 1)
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The Pope and the Papal Bulls (page 4)
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Symbolic Acts of Possession (page 7)
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Title by Discovery and Colonisation (page 17)
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Colonisation or Propagation of Faith? (page 27)
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Treaties Acknowledging Claims to Title (page 35)
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The Views of the "Fathers" of International Law (page 39)
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The Views of the Positivists (page 64)
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The Attitude of the United States Supreme Court (page 81)
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The Attitude of International Tribunals (page 84)
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The Attitude of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (page 96)
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The Royal Proclamation of 1763 (page 99)
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Conclusion (page 124)
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Abbreviations (page 129)
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Notes (page 131)
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Concepts of Sovereignty at the Time of First Contacts (OLIVE P. DICKASON, page 141)
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1 Legitimacy of Power: The Ecclesiastical Aspect (page 143)
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2 Legitimacy of Power: The Secular Aspects and the Rise of International Law (page 161)
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3 Crossing the Atlantic (page 175)
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4 Into a Strange World (page 185)
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5 Is All Mankind One? (page 201)
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6 Routes of Challenge: Trade and Land (page 215)
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7 Jus Gentium Takes on New Meanings (page 227)
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8 Conclusion: The Changing Face of Sovereignty (page 241)
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Notes (page 251)
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Index (page 297)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
AIQ | 16.3 (Summer, 1992): 415 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1185802 |
WHQ | 21.2 (May, 1990): 231-232 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/969855 |
Citable Link
Published: 1993
Publisher: University of Alberta Press
- 9780888641298 (hardcover)
- 9781417591497 (ebook)
- 9780888642578 (paper)