Sovereignty

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Scope note(s)

  • Scope note: Supreme power over a body politic; freedom from external control in the conduct of internal and external affairs, and the right not to recognize any superior or concurrent authority. Related terms: ACT OF STATE AIRSPACE CONDOMINIUM DOMESTIC JURISDICTION EQUALITY OF STATES LEGITIMACY OF GOVERNMENTS STATE IMMUNITIES STATE LIABILITY STATE REPRESENTATION STATE SUCCESSION STATES TREATIES OF GUARANTY ACQUIRED RIGHTS HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION INDEPENDENCE MONARCHY PERMANENT SOVEREIGNTY SELF-RULE

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      Sovereignty

      Sovereignty

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        Sovereignty

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          Sovereignty

            5 Archival description results for Sovereignty

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            International Law
            LON/BPC/DRO · Series · 1897-1971
            Part of Collections

            This series contains publications on Droit International and is comprised of 264 titles ranging in date from 1897 to 1971 (with greatest coverage in the 1920s and 1930s), containg brochures, bulletins, documents, Festschriften, journals, pamphlets, reprints and theses. Duplicate copies (16) and periodical issues (15) are included but not indifucually numbered. Publications concern 30 different countries and are written in 10 different languages, some items having several translations. All topics relate to International Law and include: the roles and rights of Diplomats; principles of the Geneva Convention; individual rights; international congresses; needs for, uses of and codification of International Law; government documents and reports of mediated disputes and tribunal documents; member lists; nationality laws; navigation and territory rights (water and air); the question of neutrality; political ideologies; schools of INternational Law in France, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, the U.S., and The Hague; sovereignty of peoples; trade laws; treaties; treaty-making powers of countries and issues relating to the World Court and World peace in general.

            Many of these items are rare even though reprints and government documents may possibley be available elsewhere. However, this collection is very useful and interesting for researchers working on International Law questions.