Article contents
The relation of international law to national law in the American Republics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 February 2017
Abstract
- Type
- First Session
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1916
References
1 Law and Organization: Presidential Address at the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago, Dec, 1914. The American Political Science Review, February, 1915.
2 La Grande Guerre Europeenne et la Neutrality du Chile, Paris, Pedone, A. Google Scholar, 1915.
3 A fuller statement of the case may be found in Moore's Digest of International Law, II, 868–870.
4 See, generally, Borchard's Diplomatic Protection of Citizens Abroad, or the Law of International Claims, and, particularly. Chapter VII, pp. 836–860, on “Limitations Arising out of Municipal Legislation of the Defendant State.”
5 Art. 95, paragraphs 3 and 7, of the Constitution of 1904, become Art. 98. paragraphs 3 and 7, of the Constitution of 1914; Art. 124 of the Constitution of 1904 is Art. 121 of the Constitution of 1914. For Art. 120 of the Constitution of 1904, supra, there is substituted, with the same number, in the Constitution of 1914, the following:
“In international treaties there shall be inserted the clause that ‘All differences between the contracting parties, relative to the interpretation or execution of this treaty, shall be decided by arbitration.’”
6 Moore, Google Scholar, igest of International Law, VI, 301–308x.
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