... to thehistory of international law, illuminating the imperial character ofthe disciplineand its enduring significance for peoples ofthe Third World.antony anghie is Professor ofLaw at the ... FBAWhewell Professor ofInternational Law, Faculty of Law, andDirector, Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law, University of CambridgeJohn S. Bell FBAProfessor of Law, Faculty of Law, ... sovereign ratherthan the Pope.Vitoria further undermines the position ofthe Church by refutinganother justification for Spanish conquest ofthe Indies: the argumentthat the Emperor is lord of the...
... bc,while others moved more quickly up the main waterways until, at about 1000bc, they reached the eastern edge ofthe equatorial forest in the broad area of the great East African lakes. There they ... ofthe economy at Birimi, a settlement close to the northern edge ofthe West African forest in modern Ghana. This was an outlier of the Kintampo culture whose other sites, further south in the ... eight million years ago with the separation of the hominins (ancestral to human beings) from their closest animal relatives, the ancestors ofthe chimpanzees. The skull ofthe first known hominin,...
... per day of ethanol, utilizing Saccharomyces for the pro-cess (Harris 1946). This yield of 50 gallons per ton of wood was approximately50% ofthe theoretical yield. The indicated loss of sugars ... engineeringtopics. The content reflects the interests or personal experience ofthe authors.It offers a limited view ofthehistoryof biochemical engineering. History, asalways, has to be told ... blockageA View ofTheHistoryof Biochemical Engineering81Because ofthe mild reaction conditions, the hemicellulose hydrolysate con-taining xylose was not contaminated by furfural and other degradation...
... part ofthe war effort; theyturned lipstick into a symbol of resilient femininity in the face of danger, a symbol that would boost the morale of both the women wearing the lipstick and the male ... or devices, or cosmetics because ofthe use ofthe additive, (ii) the cumulativeeffect. . .of such additive in the diet of man or animals, taking into account the same or anychemically or pharmacologically ... (explaining that:“often the public toilette was a carefully staged replay ofthe dressing ofthe hair and applying of make-up to a woman w hohad already been through the expert hands of her maids...
... was the readiest way of converting them to the principles ofthe Christian religion. These, then, were the first forerunners in the great cause ofthe abolition ofthe Slave Trade: nor have their ... held the reigns ofthe government of Spain till Charles the Fifth came to the throne, for the establishment of a regular system of commerce in the persons ofthe native Africans. The object of ... nature of it; and ofthe extent of it; and ofthe difficulty of subduing it.—Usefulness also ofthe contemplation of this subject. I scarcely know of any subject, the contemplation of which...
... pairs The results refer to the estimation of system (14) by one stage GMM estimation with the optimal weighting matrix being the unity matrix. The estimated coefficients ofthe system of equations ... the domestic country and the US for bonds. Standard errors are reported in parenthesis. J-Stat denotes the p-value ofthe J-statistic to test the null hypothesis that the overidentifying restrictions ... The US SDF and estimated expected excess returns The results refer to the estimation of system (16) by one stage GMM estimation with the optimal weighting matrix being the unity matrix. The...
... to their love of adventure, their hope of enjoying some ofthe advantages of their civilized neighbors, or the need of new lands for their increasing numbers. And the Romans, by means of their ... time formed the northern boundary ofthe kingdom ofthe West Goths. Clovis then enlarged his empire on the east by the conquest ofthe Alemanni, a German people living in the region ofthe Black ... in either Emerton or Oman. [Pg 1] INTRODUCTION TO THEHISTORYOF WESTERN EUROPE CHAPTER I THE HISTORICAL POINT OF VIEW The scope of history. 1. History, in the broadest sense of the...
... against themselves. Between the time of its ratification and the onset of the project of legibility, there was a drˆole de guerre concerning the meaning of the self-incrimination provision ofthe ... narratives ofthe path of constitutional development spotlightboth the achievement ofthe collective rights of labor in the 1930s and, at the same time, the launching of an upward progression toward the ... outsiders to the role of shapinglegal doctrine, they began their careers as critics of court power. Once theytook hold ofthe reins of state and began to staff the courts themselves, how-ever, the...
... apartheid, for instance, require states to criminalize these o enses as part of their domestic criminal law. Despite these advances in codi cation, the twentieth century saw countless international ... detailing the nancial constraints impeding the prosecution of international crimes. e following sections—which examine the budgetary di culties ofthe ad hoc tribunals, the ICC, the hybrid international- domestic ... accused ofinternational crimes in the former Yugoslavia. e years that had elapsed between the cre-ation ofthe World War II tribunals and theInternationalCriminal Tribunal for the former...
... agreeable to the majority ofthe house of commons, and suited their religious principles. But as the impatience ofthe people, the danger of delay, the general disgust towards faction, and the authority ... expressed by the parliament, there prevails a story, that Popham, having sounded the disposition ofthe members, undertook to the earl of Southampton to procure, during the king’s The Historyof England, ... died. The queen mother paid a visit to her son; and obtained his consent to the marriage ofthe princess Henrietta with the duke of Orleans, brother to the French king. After a recess of near...
... refuses the offers ofthe army. Which marches to London.Enters the city. And gives thelaw to the parliament. The king listens to the counsels ofthe officers. Andintrigues against them. Rise ofthe ... to the maintenance ofthe true Protestant religion, with due consideration to the just ease of tender consciences, to the settling ofthe rights ofthe crown and of parliament, the laws ofthe ... continued by the papists, for the solepurpose ofthe establishment of popery on the ruins of Protestantism. The constant repetition acted on the minds ofthe people as a sufficient proof ofthe charge;...
... byhis son of how, on the visit of à Beckett, Charles Dickens, and the rest, he would throw off his clothes andswim with them in the sea, or challenge them to a game of leap-frog on the sands ... his father, and sat for another seven years at the tail of the Table by right of proprietorship, the business was reinforced by the inclusion ofthe house of Agnew. Itthen became Bradbury, Agnew ... these versions (which, after all, vary hardly more than the accounts of other incidents of Punchlife[1]) it is not very easy at first sight to sift the truth. There is a story ofthe tutor of...