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Some Aspects of International Law in Southeast Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2017

Ali Sastroamidjojo*
Affiliation:
Republic of Indonesia

Abstract

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Type
Third Session
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1953

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References

1 See, e.g., Baty, , “De facto States: Sovereign Immunities,” American Journal of International Law, Vol. 45 (1951), p. 166 Google Scholar.

2 27 British Year Book of International Law (1950) 267, 274.

3 Netherlands v. Federal Reserve Bank, 99 F. Supp. 655 (S.D.N.Y., 1951), and note thereon in 100 University of Pennsylvania Law Review (1952) 764.

4 Annual Digest, 1946, p. 19, Case No. 8, Nederlandse Juridprudentie, 1946, p. 693.

5 See Horn v. Lockhart (1873), 17 Wall. 580; U. S. v. Home Insurance (1875), 22 Wall. 99.

6 See Sastroamidjojo, and Delson, , “The Status of the Republic of Indonesia in International Law,49 Columbia Law Review (1949) 344 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 See O’Connell, , “Economic Concessions in the Law of State Succession,27 British Tear Book of International Law (1950) 93 Google Scholar ff.

8 See idem, “Secured and Unsecured Debts in the Law of State Succession,” 28 ibid. (1951) 204 ff.