Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
Cambridge studies in international and comparative law ; 139 |
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Cambridge studies in international and comparative law ; 139.
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Contents |
Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Contents; 1 Introduction; 1.1 A Point on Selection and Methodology; 1.2 Repairing a Definition; 2 Peace Treaties and Admiralty Courts; 2.1 Amnesty Clauses; 2.2 Restitution Clauses; 2.3 Postliminium; 2.4 Admiralty Courts and Reparation; 2.4.1 Bond and Bail; 2.5 Conclusion; 3 The Anglo-Dutch Wars; 3.1 The First Anglo-Dutch War; 3.1.1 A Deviant Denmark; 3.1.2 Negotiations at the End of the First Anglo-Dutch War; 3.1.3 The Treaty of Westminster 1654; 3.1.4 The Commission; 3.1.4.1 The Claims |
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3.1.5 The English National Agenda3.2 The Second Anglo-Dutch War; 3.2.1 The Treaty of Breda 1667; 3.3 The Third Anglo-Dutch War; 3.3.1 The Treaty of Westminster 1674; 3.4 Admiralty Courts during the Anglo-Dutch Wars; 3.4.1 The English Admiralty; 3.4.2 The Dutch Admiralties; 3.5 Conclusion; 4 The Silesian Loan Affair and the Seven Years War; 4.1 The Silesian Loan Affair; 4.1.1 British Depredations against Prussian Subjects; 4.1.2 A Reprisal War in the Midst; 4.1.3 Negotiations on the Treaty of Westminster 1756; 4.1.4 Concluding Remarks; 4.2 The Seven Years War; 4.2.1 Merchants in the War |
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4.2.2 The Rule of 1756 and the Doctrine of Continuous Voyage4.3 The Peace Treaties Ending the Seven Years War; 4.3.1 The Treaty of Paris 1763; 4.3.2 The Treaty of Hubertusberg 1763; 4.4 Conclusion; 5 The American War of Independence; 5.1 American Loyalists; 5.2 The Peace of Paris 1783: Additional Reparation Issues; 5.3 The Jay Treaty 1794; 5.3.1 The British Debts Commission; 5.3.2 The Maritime Claims Commission; 5.4 Conclusion; 6 The Anglo-Argentine Commission; 6.1 Compensation for British Merchants; 6.1.1 The Anglo-Argentine Commission; 6.2 Conclusion; 7 The American Civil War |
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7.1 The Alabama Arbitration: An International Tribunal7.2 The Alabama and the Nineteenth Century; 7.3 Additional Claims Arising from the War; 7.3.1 The Southern Claims Commission; 8 The Second Anglo-Boer War; 8.1 The Invasion Losses Enquiry Commission; 8.2 The South African Deportation Military Authorities Compensation Commission; 8.3 Other Compensatory Mechanisms; 8.3.1 Central Judicial Commission; 8.3.2 A Domestic Mechanism: The Derelict Stock Fund; 8.4 The Treaty of Vereeniging; 8.5 Conclusion; 9 Reparation and International Law from the Twentieth Century |
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9.1 International Law in the Making9.1.1 International Humanitarian Law; 9.1.1.1 State Responsibility; 9.1.2 International Criminal Law; 9.1.3 Human Rights Law; 9.1.4 Transnational Public Law Litigation or Arbitration; 9.2 Conclusion; 10 A Peaceful and Normative Conclusion?; 10.1 Historical Observations; 10.2 Peace Treaties and International Law; 10.3 The Normative Element of Reparations; List of Cases; List of Treaties, Legislation and Other Legal Instruments; Bibliography; 1 Archival Sources; London, National Archives; Historical Society of Pennsylvania; New York Historical Society |
Summary |
Takes an in-depth look into the war victim's right to reparation from the seventeenth century until the present day |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed January 3, 2019) |
Subject |
Reparation (Criminal justice)
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War reparations.
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War victims -- Legal status, laws, etc.
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LAW -- International.
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Reparation (Criminal justice)
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War reparations
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War victims -- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Jus post Bellum.
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Wars.
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War reparations.
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War victims.
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International humanitarian law.
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9781108627191 |
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1108627196 |
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9781108559171 |
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1108559174 |
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