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Throughout his career, Philip C. Jessup was passionately committed to the use of law and diplomacy for the peaceful settlement of international disputes. He provided a generation of leadership in the wide and difficult endeavor that he characterized as “transnational law”—by which he meant to emphasize the importance of a wider storehouse of rules and avoidance of the dogmas and fictions associated with traditional international law.
- Type
- Jessup: Memorials and Reminiscences
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- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1986
References
* Of the Board of Editors.
1 See, e.g., Jessup, , Parliamentary Diplomacy: An Examination of the Legal Quality of the Rules of Procedure of Organs of the United Nations, 89 Recueil des Cours 185, 234 (1956 I)Google Scholar.
2 Bohlen, C., Witness to History 1929–1969, at 281 (1973)Google Scholar.
3 Hyde, , A Special Chamber of the International Court of Justice–An Alternative to ad hoc Arbitration, 62 AJIL 439 (1968)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 Jessup, , To Form a More Perfect United Nations, 129 Recueil des Cours 1, 18 (1970 I)Google Scholar.
5 Hyde, , Foreign Agents’ Registration: A Practitioner’s Note, 5 N.C.J. Int’l L. & Com. Reg. 377 (1980)Google Scholar.
6 United States Mission to the United Nations Press Release No. 438, Apr. 23, 1948.
7 See note 1 supra. For the other lecture, see note 4 supra.
8 Quoted by Hyde in a presentation to the Ford Foundation (Nov. 15, 1974).
9 Jessup, , The Future of International Law Making, in Columbia Law School Centennial Conference Volume: Legal Institutions Today and Tomorrow 208, 215 (Paulsen, Monrad G. ed. 1959)Google Scholar.
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