Law & Politics in International SocietySAGE Publications, 1976 - 191 pages |
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Page 136
... national societies , functioning in their own psychic environment and de- voted to their own inner order . There is lacking the common sentiments and attitudes , the common values and agreement on their hierarchy which , the argument ...
... national societies , functioning in their own psychic environment and de- voted to their own inner order . There is lacking the common sentiments and attitudes , the common values and agreement on their hierarchy which , the argument ...
Page 153
... society . Such escalation is kept in bounds within national societies - when all else fails - by the catchall device of the government's preponderant ability to maintain social order , especially to prevent violence as a means for ...
... society . Such escalation is kept in bounds within national societies - when all else fails - by the catchall device of the government's preponderant ability to maintain social order , especially to prevent violence as a means for ...
Page 161
... national societies because the society has agreed upon them beforehand in most instances . In the international society , the unequal distribution of power and its decisive effect upon the nature of social institutions as well as upon ...
... national societies because the society has agreed upon them beforehand in most instances . In the international society , the unequal distribution of power and its decisive effect upon the nature of social institutions as well as upon ...
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Common terms and phrases
accepted action agreement applied arbitration become behavior binding Charter clausula Communist concept Conference conflict consensus Continental Shelf cooperation Court of International Court of Justice creating cultural custom customary law decisions defined delegate developed disputes distributive justice economic effect ence existence favorable force formulation function Georg Schwarzenberger Group of 77 independence individual inequalities instance interaction International Court International Justice international law International Law Commission international lawyers international organizations international politics international relations international society interpretation judges judicial Julius Stone jurisdiction legal equality legal principles legal regulation legal rules legal system legislative limited means ment moral rules mutual national interests national law national societies nature newer norms obligation parties peaceful Permanent Court power potential practice prevail problem purposes reason role sanctions settlement situation social change social order sover sovereignty Soviet Soviet Union specific state's subjects of international tions United Nations United Nations Charter Upper Silesia