AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearKey Terms in Title or Summary
Iv. The Interchangeable Use of Executive Agreements and Treaties in the Conduct of Our Foreign Affairs 54 Yale Law Journal 261 (March, 1945) To ascertain the full extent to which Congressional-Executive and Presidential agreements have become interchangeable with the treaty it is necessary to look, not at the vague evaluative judgments of secondary writers, but at the actual record of how these instruments have been used in our diplomatic practice. It is this record that completely... 1945
Author
Title Iv. The Interchangeable Use of Executive Agreements and Treaties in the Conduct of Our Foreign Affairs
Citation 54 Yale Law Journal 261 (March, 1945)
Summary To ascertain the full extent to which Congressional-Executive and Presidential agreements have become interchangeable with the treaty it is necessary to look, not at the vague evaluative judgments of secondary writers, but at the actual record of how these instruments have been used in our diplomatic practice. It is this record that completely...
Year 1945
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Myres S. McDougal , Asher Lans Treaties and Congressional-executive or Presidential Agreements: Interchangeable Instruments of National Policy: Ii 54 Yale Law Journal 534 (June, 1945) The existence under our Constitution of the variety of interchangeable techniques, described in the previous Sections of this article, for perfecting international agreements has obviously served the nation well in the past. It may in the future, if the facts of variety and inter-changeability are fully recognized and acted upon by the public and... 1945
Author Myres S. McDougal , Asher Lans
Title Treaties and Congressional-executive or Presidential Agreements: Interchangeable Instruments of National Policy: Ii
Citation 54 Yale Law Journal 534 (June, 1945)
Summary The existence under our Constitution of the variety of interchangeable techniques, described in the previous Sections of this article, for perfecting international agreements has obviously served the nation well in the past. It may in the future, if the facts of variety and inter-changeability are fully recognized and acted upon by the public and...
Year 1945
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Edwin Borchard Treaties and Executive Agreements-a Reply 54 Yale Law Journal 616 (June, 1945) The authors of the articles under reply, Messrs. McDougal and Lans, have, like McClure, essayed to show that the treaty and the executive agreement are interchangeable, and, since executive agreements are simpler to conclude, they advocate disregarding as obsolete the treaty-making power, requiring, as it does, the consent of two-thirds of the... 1945
Author Edwin Borchard
Title Treaties and Executive Agreements-a Reply
Citation 54 Yale Law Journal 616 (June, 1945)
Summary The authors of the articles under reply, Messrs. McDougal and Lans, have, like McClure, essayed to show that the treaty and the executive agreement are interchangeable, and, since executive agreements are simpler to conclude, they advocate disregarding as obsolete the treaty-making power, requiring, as it does, the consent of two-thirds of the...
Year 1945
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Vi. The Identical Legal Consequences of Treaties and Executive Agreements 54 Yale Law Journal 307 (March, 1945) Comparison of the consequences of effecting international arrangements by treaties on the one hand or by executive agreements on the other has frequently been characterized by abstract theorizing and a curious obliviousness to the realities of diplomatic practice. Emphasis has been placed upon the unsubstantiated remarks of scholars or statesmen as... 1945
Author
Title Vi. The Identical Legal Consequences of Treaties and Executive Agreements
Citation 54 Yale Law Journal 307 (March, 1945)
Summary Comparison of the consequences of effecting international arrangements by treaties on the one hand or by executive agreements on the other has frequently been characterized by abstract theorizing and a curious obliviousness to the realities of diplomatic practice. Emphasis has been placed upon the unsubstantiated remarks of scholars or statesmen as...
Year 1945
Key Terms in Title or Summary
John Day Larkin Treaties and Constitutional Law: Property Interferences and Due Process of Law 56 Harvard Law Review 158 (September, 1942) In this interesting historical study which, incidentally, is a triumph of the case method the distinction is constantly drawn between the power to make treaties and the power to enforce them as a part of the domestic law. It is admitted that the Federal Government's power to make a treaty to accomplish an international end is limited only by... 1942
Author John Day Larkin
Title Treaties and Constitutional Law: Property Interferences and Due Process of Law
Citation 56 Harvard Law Review 158 (September, 1942)
Summary In this interesting historical study which, incidentally, is a triumph of the case method the distinction is constantly drawn between the power to make treaties and the power to enforce them as a part of the domestic law. It is admitted that the Federal Government's power to make a treaty to accomplish an international end is limited only by...
Year 1942
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Arthur Nussbaum, Columbia University School of Law Treaties on Commercial Arbitration - a Test of International Private-law Legislation 56 Harvard Law Review 219 (October, 1942) DURING the last few decades, commercial arbitration has become a favorite subject of discussion and organizational activity in the business world as well as in the legal profession. This generation has witnessed a tremendous rise of commercial arbitration, especially in highly industrialized countries such as the United States, England, Germany,... 1942
Author Arthur Nussbaum, Columbia University School of Law
Title Treaties on Commercial Arbitration - a Test of International Private-law Legislation
Citation 56 Harvard Law Review 219 (October, 1942)
Summary DURING the last few decades, commercial arbitration has become a favorite subject of discussion and organizational activity in the business world as well as in the legal profession. This generation has witnessed a tremendous rise of commercial arbitration, especially in highly industrialized countries such as the United States, England, Germany,...
Year 1942
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Myres S. McDougal A Treatise on Mortgages. By Willam F. Walsh. Chicago: Callaghan. 1934 Pp. Xlv, 376 44 Yale Law Journal 1278 (May, 1935) This is a handbook on the legal doctrine about some of the more important real estate mortgage problems. The structure of the book is that of the orthodox law school course. There are fifteen chapters which range, after a prologue on the history of mortgage theory, through equitable mortgages, interests that may be mortgaged, the mortgage debt,... 1935
Author Myres S. McDougal
Title A Treatise on Mortgages. By Willam F. Walsh. Chicago: Callaghan. 1934 Pp. Xlv, 376
Citation 44 Yale Law Journal 1278 (May, 1935)
Summary This is a handbook on the legal doctrine about some of the more important real estate mortgage problems. The structure of the book is that of the orthodox law school course. There are fifteen chapters which range, after a prologue on the history of mortgage theory, through equitable mortgages, interests that may be mortgaged, the mortgage debt,...
Year 1935
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Considerations Determining Necessary and Proper Parties in State Court Equity Practice 48 Harvard Law Review 995 (April, 1935) The chancellors, working with a flexible procedure towards an ideal of complete justice, early felt, as Story phrased it, that all persons materially interested, either legally or beneficially, in the subject-matter of a suit, are to be made parties to it, either as plaintiffs or as defendants, however numerous they may be, so that there may be a... 1935
Author
Title Considerations Determining Necessary and Proper Parties in State Court Equity Practice
Citation 48 Harvard Law Review 995 (April, 1935)
Summary The chancellors, working with a flexible procedure towards an ideal of complete justice, early felt, as Story phrased it, that all persons materially interested, either legally or beneficially, in the subject-matter of a suit, are to be made parties to it, either as plaintiffs or as defendants, however numerous they may be, so that there may be a...
Year 1935
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Constitutional Law - Legislative Powers: Bankruptcy - Public Debtor Relief as Invasion of State Sovereignty 48 Harvard Law Review 1435 (June, 1935) An irrigation district filed a petition for readjustment of its outstanding bonds under §§ 78-80 of the Bankruptcy Act. 48 Stat. 798-803, 11 U. S. C A. §§ 301-03 (1934). The state's consent to this action was apparently not procured. At the hearing more than 5 per cent of the holders of the petitioner's outstanding bonds filed an intervention and... 1935
Author
Title Constitutional Law - Legislative Powers: Bankruptcy - Public Debtor Relief as Invasion of State Sovereignty
Citation 48 Harvard Law Review 1435 (June, 1935)
Summary An irrigation district filed a petition for readjustment of its outstanding bonds under §§ 78-80 of the Bankruptcy Act. 48 Stat. 798-803, 11 U. S. C A. §§ 301-03 (1934). The state's consent to this action was apparently not procured. At the hearing more than 5 per cent of the holders of the petitioner's outstanding bonds filed an intervention and...
Year 1935
Key Terms in Title or Summary
H. Lauterpacht, The London School of Economics and Political Science, University of London Some Observations on Preparatory Work in the Interpretation of Treaties 48 Harvard Law Review 549 (February, 1935) THE question of preparatory work in the interpretation of treaties has confronted international judicial agencies from the very inception of modern international arbitration. It has occupied them probably in the majority of cases in which they have been called upon to interpret disputed provisions of treaties. It has constituted a constant feature... 1935
Author H. Lauterpacht, The London School of Economics and Political Science, University of London
Title Some Observations on Preparatory Work in the Interpretation of Treaties
Citation 48 Harvard Law Review 549 (February, 1935)
Summary THE question of preparatory work in the interpretation of treaties has confronted international judicial agencies from the very inception of modern international arbitration. It has occupied them probably in the majority of cases in which they have been called upon to interpret disputed provisions of treaties. It has constituted a constant feature...
Year 1935
Key Terms in Title or Summary
John Fischer Williams Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America 46 Harvard Law Review 879 (March, 1933) The importance of this publication will be apparent to every historian and international lawyer. When it is completed, there will be available to the student in a readily accessible form an exact reprint verbatim et literatim of all treaties and other international acts of the United States. The first volume, as printed at present, is in... 1933
Author John Fischer Williams
Title Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America
Citation 46 Harvard Law Review 879 (March, 1933)
Summary The importance of this publication will be apparent to every historian and international lawyer. When it is completed, there will be available to the student in a readily accessible form an exact reprint verbatim et literatim of all treaties and other international acts of the United States. The first volume, as printed at present, is in...
Year 1933
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Walther Hug, Harvard Law School The History of Comparative Law 45 Harvard Law Review 1027 (April, 1932) COMPARATIVE law, as Professor Wigmore has said, is a convenient but loose term. It serves to embrace all those studies which, characteristically, do not confine their attention to domestic law. These, however, vary in purpose and method. All of them are not really comparative, even today; there is still a tendency to comprehend the mere study of... 1932
Author Walther Hug, Harvard Law School
Title The History of Comparative Law
Citation 45 Harvard Law Review 1027 (April, 1932)
Summary COMPARATIVE law, as Professor Wigmore has said, is a convenient but loose term. It serves to embrace all those studies which, characteristically, do not confine their attention to domestic law. These, however, vary in purpose and method. All of them are not really comparative, even today; there is still a tendency to comprehend the mere study of...
Year 1932
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Joseph H. Beale, John E. Laughlin, Jr., Randolph H. Guthrie, Daniel M. Sandomire, Harvard Law School Marriage and the Domicil 44 Harvard Law Review 501 (February, 1931) CAESAR had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell, and with us the steps of marriage are dogged insistently by the law of the domicils of the parties to it. Here we seem to hear the voice of a friend saying, There is no such thing as domicil; it is a mere conception. There is no such thing as marriage; it is an abstraction. There is no such... 1931
Author Joseph H. Beale, John E. Laughlin, Jr., Randolph H. Guthrie, Daniel M. Sandomire, Harvard Law School
Title Marriage and the Domicil
Citation 44 Harvard Law Review 501 (February, 1931)
Summary CAESAR had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell, and with us the steps of marriage are dogged insistently by the law of the domicils of the parties to it. Here we seem to hear the voice of a friend saying, There is no such thing as domicil; it is a mere conception. There is no such thing as marriage; it is an abstraction. There is no such...
Year 1931
Key Terms in Title or Summary
The Present Status of the Doctrine of Intergovernmental Relations 44 Harvard Law Review 829 (March, 1931) The recent decision in Educational Films Corp. v. Ward has apparently gone far to incorporate the law of torts into constitutional interpretation. An indirect intentional statutory invasion of the sanctity of governmental instrumentalities seems now void even without proof of resulting harm, while an indirect unintentional invasion is void only... 1931
Author
Title The Present Status of the Doctrine of Intergovernmental Relations
Citation 44 Harvard Law Review 829 (March, 1931)
Summary The recent decision in Educational Films Corp. v. Ward has apparently gone far to incorporate the law of torts into constitutional interpretation. An indirect intentional statutory invasion of the sanctity of governmental instrumentalities seems now void even without proof of resulting harm, while an indirect unintentional invasion is void only...
Year 1931
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Max Radin The Intermittent Sovereign 39 Yale Law Journal 514 (February, 1930) It is impossible to escape from Austin, or rather from Aristotle, for the whole history of Western civilization is saturated with the concept of the state or community as composed of one part which gives commands and another which obeys them. Few people have held that all states were in fact so organized or that the existing states were developed... 1930
Author Max Radin
Title The Intermittent Sovereign
Citation 39 Yale Law Journal 514 (February, 1930)
Summary It is impossible to escape from Austin, or rather from Aristotle, for the whole history of Western civilization is saturated with the concept of the state or community as composed of one part which gives commands and another which obeys them. Few people have held that all states were in fact so organized or that the existing states were developed...
Year 1930
Key Terms in Title or Summary
W. S. Holdsworth, All Souls College, Oxford Blackstone's Treatment of Equity 43 Harvard Law Review Rev. 1 (November, 1929) BLACKSTONE'S Commentaries were published between the years 1765 and 1769. Ever since the Restoration, during the whole of the eighteenth century, and especially during the long chancellorship of Lord Hardwicke (1737-1756), the process of transforming equity into a regular system of settled principles and rules had been proceeding; and that process... 1929
Author W. S. Holdsworth, All Souls College, Oxford
Title Blackstone's Treatment of Equity
Citation 43 Harvard Law Review Rev. 1 (November, 1929)
Summary BLACKSTONE'S Commentaries were published between the years 1765 and 1769. Ever since the Restoration, during the whole of the eighteenth century, and especially during the long chancellorship of Lord Hardwicke (1737-1756), the process of transforming equity into a regular system of settled principles and rules had been proceeding; and that process...
Year 1929
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Our Treaties of Peace with the Central Powers 40 Harvard Law Review 752 (March, 1927) The Treaty of Berlin, restoring friendly relations with Germany, is a skeleton structure. It confirmed the state of peace, but did not set forth the details of a peace settlement. Instead, it secured to the United States the rights and advantages she claimed in the Congressional Peace Resolution and those she would have obtained under certain Parts... 1927
Author
Title Our Treaties of Peace with the Central Powers
Citation 40 Harvard Law Review 752 (March, 1927)
Summary The Treaty of Berlin, restoring friendly relations with Germany, is a skeleton structure. It confirmed the state of peace, but did not set forth the details of a peace settlement. Instead, it secured to the United States the rights and advantages she claimed in the Congressional Peace Resolution and those she would have obtained under certain Parts...
Year 1927
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Edgar Turlington Treaty Relations with Turkey 35 Yale Law Journal 326 (January, 1926) The treaty of general relations concluded at Lausanne, August 6, 1923, is designed, according to its preamble, to re-establish the consular and commercial relations of the Contracting Parties, and to regulate the conditions of the intercourse and residence of the nationals of each of them on the territory of the other in accordance with principles... 1926
Author Edgar Turlington
Title Treaty Relations with Turkey
Citation 35 Yale Law Journal 326 (January, 1926)
Summary The treaty of general relations concluded at Lausanne, August 6, 1923, is designed, according to its preamble, to re-establish the consular and commercial relations of the Contracting Parties, and to regulate the conditions of the intercourse and residence of the nationals of each of them on the territory of the other in accordance with principles...
Year 1926
Key Terms in Title or Summary
E. M. Morgan, Yale University School of Law A Treatise on the Anglo-american System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law, Including the Statutes and Judicial Decisions of All Jurisdictions of the United States and Canada. By John Henry Wigmore. In Five Volumes. Boston, Little, Brown & Company, 1923. 33 Yale Law Journal 336 (January, 1924) The publication of the first edition of this epoch-making work in 1904-1905 put at the disposal of the legal profession the most exhaustive, scientific and scholarly treatise ever written upon the subject of evidence. It is no cyclopaedic text-book with a jumble of conflicting statements, supported by bare citation of cases. On the contrary, each... 1924
Author E. M. Morgan, Yale University School of Law
Title A Treatise on the Anglo-american System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law, Including the Statutes and Judicial Decisions of All Jurisdictions of the United States and Canada. By John Henry Wigmore. In Five Volumes. Boston, Little, Brown & Company, 1923.
Citation 33 Yale Law Journal 336 (January, 1924)
Summary The publication of the first edition of this epoch-making work in 1904-1905 put at the disposal of the legal profession the most exhaustive, scientific and scholarly treatise ever written upon the subject of evidence. It is no cyclopaedic text-book with a jumble of conflicting statements, supported by bare citation of cases. On the contrary, each...
Year 1924
Key Terms in Title or Summary
M. O. H. A Treatise on International Law, with an Introductory Essay on the Definition and Nature of the Laws of Human Conduct 34 Harvard Law Review 802 (May, 1921) It was one of the wise observations of John Chipman Gray that a loose vocabulary is the fruitful mother of evils. Mr. Foulke's notable work on the law of perpetuities and future interests seems to have led him to share Mr. Gray's dissatisfaction with a jurisprudence encysted in phrases, and this treatise represents an attempt to clear away some... 1921
Author M. O. H.
Title A Treatise on International Law, with an Introductory Essay on the Definition and Nature of the Laws of Human Conduct
Citation 34 Harvard Law Review 802 (May, 1921)
Summary It was one of the wise observations of John Chipman Gray that a loose vocabulary is the fruitful mother of evils. Mr. Foulke's notable work on the law of perpetuities and future interests seems to have led him to share Mr. Gray's dissatisfaction with a jurisprudence encysted in phrases, and this treatise represents an attempt to clear away some...
Year 1921
Key Terms in Title or Summary
William Whitwell Dewhurst, Florida Bar Does the Constitution Make the President Sole Negotiator of Treaties 30 Yale Law Journal 478 (March, 1921) When the Armistice was proclaimed, the President assumed that he had the sole power to negotiate the treaties with Germany and Austria-Hungary, with the governments of which powers Congress had declared a state of war existed. The President also assumed the power to aid in establishing new nationalities and in determining the territorial boundaries... 1921
Author William Whitwell Dewhurst, Florida Bar
Title Does the Constitution Make the President Sole Negotiator of Treaties
Citation 30 Yale Law Journal 478 (March, 1921)
Summary When the Armistice was proclaimed, the President assumed that he had the sole power to negotiate the treaties with Germany and Austria-Hungary, with the governments of which powers Congress had declared a state of war existed. The President also assumed the power to aid in establishing new nationalities and in determining the territorial boundaries...
Year 1921
Key Terms in Title or Summary
T. Baty, Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple Sovereign Colonies 34 Harvard Law Review 837 (June, 1921) UNTIL a very short time ago the only answer to this question would in law have been that there is no such person. Popular language spoke of Australians, but in a way far too loose and undefined to serve as a legal conception. An Australian simply meant a person who had an intimate connection with Australia, involving some residence there at not... 1921
Author T. Baty, Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple
Title Sovereign Colonies
Citation 34 Harvard Law Review 837 (June, 1921)
Summary UNTIL a very short time ago the only answer to this question would in law have been that there is no such person. Popular language spoke of Australians, but in a way far too loose and undefined to serve as a legal conception. An Australian simply meant a person who had an intimate connection with Australia, involving some residence there at not...
Year 1921
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Ernst Freund, University of Chicago Reservations to Treaties: Their Effect, and the Procedure in Regard Thereto 33 Harvard Law Review 874 (April, 1920) This is a careful exposition of the practice pursued by the government of the United States in agreeing to an international treaty subject to reservations. The author undertakes to show that in every case of a real reservation the reservation became part of the final act prior to or at the time when that act was legally perfected; in other words,... 1920
Author Ernst Freund, University of Chicago
Title Reservations to Treaties: Their Effect, and the Procedure in Regard Thereto
Citation 33 Harvard Law Review 874 (April, 1920)
Summary This is a careful exposition of the practice pursued by the government of the United States in agreeing to an international treaty subject to reservations. The author undertakes to show that in every case of a real reservation the reservation became part of the final act prior to or at the time when that act was legally perfected; in other words,...
Year 1920
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Simeon E. Baldwin, Professor of Law, Yale University The Vesting of Sovereignty in a League of Nations 28 Yale Law Journal 209 (January, 1919) The general movement in human society is from the simple to the complex. The family, expanding into the tribe, is the first political unit, and the will of the patriarch is its rule of conduct. Gradually the operation of that will becomes in some measure limited. Several tribes come to constitute a nation. The nation, as civilization advances,... 1919
Author Simeon E. Baldwin, Professor of Law, Yale University
Title The Vesting of Sovereignty in a League of Nations
Citation 28 Yale Law Journal 209 (January, 1919)
Summary The general movement in human society is from the simple to the complex. The family, expanding into the tribe, is the first political unit, and the will of the patriarch is its rule of conduct. Gradually the operation of that will becomes in some measure limited. Several tribes come to constitute a nation. The nation, as civilization advances,...
Year 1919
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Aliens-declarant's Liability to Military Service-conflict of Statute and Treaty 28 Yale Law Journal 83 (November, 1918) The petitioner, a native of Spain, who had declared his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States, was arrested off the coast of Mexico, while returning to Spain, charged with evading the Selective Draft Act. He sued out a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the treaty of 1903 between the United States and Spain exempted him from... 1918
Author
Title Aliens-declarant's Liability to Military Service-conflict of Statute and Treaty
Citation 28 Yale Law Journal 83 (November, 1918)
Summary The petitioner, a native of Spain, who had declared his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States, was arrested off the coast of Mexico, while returning to Spain, charged with evading the Selective Draft Act. He sued out a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the treaty of 1903 between the United States and Spain exempted him from...
Year 1918
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Roscoe Pound The Principles of Muhammadan Jurisprudence According to the Hanafi, Malavi, Shafi'i and Hanbali Schools 29 Harvard Law Review 348 (January, 1916) These books on the personal law of Mohammedans and Hindus, as administered in British India, have, one need not say, no interest for the practising lawyer in this part of the world. But they contain much that cannot but be of significance to the student of the science of law who would keep abreast of the march of that science in the world of... 1916
Author Roscoe Pound
Title The Principles of Muhammadan Jurisprudence According to the Hanafi, Malavi, Shafi'i and Hanbali Schools
Citation 29 Harvard Law Review 348 (January, 1916)
Summary These books on the personal law of Mohammedans and Hindus, as administered in British India, have, one need not say, no interest for the practising lawyer in this part of the world. But they contain much that cannot but be of significance to the student of the science of law who would keep abreast of the march of that science in the world of...
Year 1916
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Theodore P. Ion, Boston University Law School Sanctity of Treaties 20 Yale Law Journal 268 (February, 1911) Distinguished jurists and eminent internationalists have often discussed the question of the true meaning of the sanctity or inviolability of treaties, without being able to come to a definite understanding, their ideas having not yet crystalized into any concrete form, giving satisfaction both to the legal science and the practical exigencies of... 1911
Author Theodore P. Ion, Boston University Law School
Title Sanctity of Treaties
Citation 20 Yale Law Journal 268 (February, 1911)
Summary Distinguished jurists and eminent internationalists have often discussed the question of the true meaning of the sanctity or inviolability of treaties, without being able to come to a definite understanding, their ideas having not yet crystalized into any concrete form, giving satisfaction both to the legal science and the practical exigencies of...
Year 1911
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Roscoe Pound, Harvard Law School The Scope and Purpose of Sociological Jurisprudence 25 Harvard Law Review 140 (December, 1911) [Continued.] A RADICAL change in jurisprudence began when the social utilitarians turned their attention from the nature of law to its purpose. On this account, the work of the leader of this group, Rudolf von Jhering (1818-1892), is quite as epoch-making as that of Savigny. A great Romanist, Jhering saw, none the less, the futility of the... 1911
Author Roscoe Pound, Harvard Law School
Title The Scope and Purpose of Sociological Jurisprudence
Citation 25 Harvard Law Review 140 (December, 1911)
Summary [Continued.] A RADICAL change in jurisprudence began when the social utilitarians turned their attention from the nature of law to its purpose. On this account, the work of the leader of this group, Rudolf von Jhering (1818-1892), is quite as epoch-making as that of Savigny. A great Romanist, Jhering saw, none the less, the futility of the...
Year 1911
Key Terms in Title or Summary
J. W. The Treaty Power under the Constitution of the United States 22 Harvard Law Review 311 (February, 1909) This stout volume covers the law of treaties under our Constitution and of cognate subjects arising therefrom. The constitutional provisions are first dealt with; then follow a consideration of the making, taking effect, and termination of treaties; of their construction; of the extent of the treaty-making power; of the legal questions relating to... 1909
Author J. W.
Title The Treaty Power under the Constitution of the United States
Citation 22 Harvard Law Review 311 (February, 1909)
Summary This stout volume covers the law of treaties under our Constitution and of cognate subjects arising therefrom. The constitutional provisions are first dealt with; then follow a consideration of the making, taking effect, and termination of treaties; of their construction; of the extent of the treaty-making power; of the legal questions relating to...
Year 1909
Key Terms in Title or Summary
Freeman Snow, Cambridge Legal Rights under the Clayton-bulwer Treaty 3 Harvard Law Review 53 (May 15, 1889) SOON after the establishment of the independence of the Spanish-American republics, the United States, as well as several European States, were occupied with schemes for constructing a ship canal across the isthmus which connects the continents of North and South America. Among other documents of this period bearing on the subject, we may mention,... 1889
Author Freeman Snow, Cambridge
Title Legal Rights under the Clayton-bulwer Treaty
Citation 3 Harvard Law Review 53 (May 15, 1889)
Summary SOON after the establishment of the independence of the Spanish-American republics, the United States, as well as several European States, were occupied with schemes for constructing a ship canal across the isthmus which connects the continents of North and South America. Among other documents of this period bearing on the subject, we may mention,...
Year 1889
Key Terms in Title or Summary
128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145