
Peace Through Law
The Versailles Peace Treaty and Dispute Settlement After World War I- Herausgeber:innen:
- | |
- Reihe:
- Studies of the Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law, Band 16
- Verlag:
- 26.03.2019
Zusammenfassung
Den Vertrag von Versailles als ein Beispiel von „Frieden durch Recht“ darzustellen, mag rückblickend als Provokation erscheinen. Und doch bestechen der Versailler und die anderen Pariser Friedensverträge von 1919–1920 noch heute durch die schiere Vielfalt und Neuartigkeit der durch sie auf den Plan gerufenen völkerrechtlichen „Experimente“ sowohl substantieller als auch verfahrensrechtlicher Natur. Obwohl viele dieser „Experimente“ auch das Völkerrecht und die internationale Streitbeilegung in der Zeit nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg grundlegend beeinflusst haben, sind sie heute kaum noch ein Teil des kollektiven Gedächtnisses.
Die in diesem Buch vereinigten juristischen und historischen Forschungsarbeiten geben einen Gesamtüberblick über die Art und Weise wie die Pariser Friedensverträge die internationale Streitbeilegung in der Zwischenkriegszeit sowohl substantiell als auch verfahrensrechtlich geprägt haben. Die in diesem Buch enthaltenen Darstellungen teilweise in Vergessenheit geratener internationaler Gerichte und ihren Entscheidungen werden durch Archiv- und Bildmaterial zusätzlich untermauert.
Schlagworte
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Bibliographische Angaben
- Copyrightjahr
- 2019
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 26.03.2019
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-5754-1
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-8452-9916-7
- Verlag
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Reihe
- Studies of the Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law
- Band
- 16
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Seiten
- 354
- Produkttyp
- Sammelband
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisSeiten 1 - 10 Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Michel Erpelding Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Peace Through Law?Michel Erpelding
- 2. The Establishment of a New International Order of PeaceMichel Erpelding
- 3. The Emergence of International Economic LawMichel Erpelding
- 4. The Institutionalization of International AdjudicationMichel Erpelding
- 5. Beyond ‘Peace Through Law’: The Use of Law and Its Records as Vehicles of Resistance and ChangeMichel Erpelding
- Nathaniel Berman Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Prologue: Noël, 1913Nathaniel Berman
- 2. A Dramatic GestureNathaniel Berman
- 3. The Dramatis Personae and the Actors: Dynamics and IndeterminacyNathaniel Berman
- 4. The Agon of the PersonaeNathaniel Berman
- 5. Dramatic AnomaliesNathaniel Berman
- 6. Destructive ParodyNathaniel Berman
- 7. No Exit?Nathaniel Berman
- 8. The ‘Art of Justice’ and the ‘Smoking Crater’Nathaniel Berman
- 9. Conclusion … or Not?Nathaniel Berman
- Thomas D Grant Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionThomas D Grant
- 2. Sovereign Equality Emerging—But not EntrenchedThomas D Grant
- 3. Admission, Voting, and Sovereign Equality in the LeagueThomas D Grant
- 4. Other Aspects of ParticipationThomas D Grant
- 5. ConclusionThomas D Grant
- Chapter 3 Preventing a Repetition of the Great War: Responding to International Terrorism in the 1930sSeiten 85 - 98 Michael D Callahan Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Mamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- Mamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 2.1. The Principle of Non-Annexation of Territories Upon Military VictoryMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 2.2. The Internationalization of the Treatment of Certain Colonial PopulationsMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 2.3. The Institutionalization of a Droit de Regard with Respect to the Treatment of Certain Colonial PopulationsMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- Mamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 3.1. The Mandates System as a Formalization of the Interests of Colonial PowersMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 3.2. The Reliance of the Mandates System on the Right of CivilizationMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 3.3. The Mandates System as an Entrenchment of Colonial DominationMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- 4. ConclusionMamadou Hébié, Paula Baldini Miranda da Cruz
- León Castellanos-Jankiewicz Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- León Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 2.1. Wartime Mistreatment of MinoritiesLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 2.2. The Allies’ War Aims and National MinoritiesLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 2.3. Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points and Self-DeterminationLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- León Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 3.1. Wilson’s Equal Treatment ClausesLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 3.2. Japan’s Racial Equality ClauseLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 3.3. Equality in the Polish Treaty: Defining MomentsLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- 4. Concluding remarksLeón Castellanos-Jankiewicz
- Guy Fiti Sinclair Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionGuy Fiti Sinclair
- 2. From Revolution to ReformGuy Fiti Sinclair
- 3. Legal Proceduralism versus RevolutionGuy Fiti Sinclair
- 4. Law and Morality: Towards Responsive LawGuy Fiti Sinclair
- 5. Law and/as ExpertiseGuy Fiti Sinclair
- 6. ConclusionGuy Fiti Sinclair
- Herbert Kronke Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction: Terminology and the Historical ContextHerbert Kronke
- Herbert Kronke
- 2.1. The Institutional FrameworkHerbert Kronke
- 2.2. The Work Programme, and the IndividualsHerbert Kronke
- 2.3. 1937: Not the End, but a Transition into the UnknownHerbert Kronke
- Herbert Kronke
- 3.1. Political BackgroundHerbert Kronke
- 3.2. The 1923 Protocol on Arbitration ClausesHerbert Kronke
- 3.3. The 1927 Convention on the Execution of Foreign Arbitral AwardsHerbert Kronke
- 3.4 Overall AssessmentHerbert Kronke
- 4. ConclusionHerbert Kronke
- Jean-Louis Halpérin Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Jean-Louis Halpérin
- 1.1 An American IdeaJean-Louis Halpérin
- 1.2 A British EnlargementJean-Louis Halpérin
- 1.3 An Inter-Allied CompromiseJean-Louis Halpérin
- 1.4 The Reparation Commission as a New DealJean-Louis Halpérin
- Jean-Louis Halpérin
- 2.1 The Ambiguous Status of the Reparation CommissionJean-Louis Halpérin
- 2.2 The Obstacles for Transforming the Reparation Commission into an Independent TribunalJean-Louis Halpérin
- 2.3 The Turning Point of 1922Jean-Louis Halpérin
- Pierre d’Argent Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Morality, Law, and the EconomistsPierre d’Argent
- 2. The Magnitude of the German Reparation DebtPierre d’Argent
- 3. The Ruhr Crisis and the Dawes PlanPierre d’Argent
- 4. The Young Plan and Its AftermathPierre d’Argent
- 5. The Versailles Reparations in PerspectivePierre d’Argent
- Christian J Tams Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionChristian J Tams
- Christian J Tams
- 2.1. A World Court at LastChristian J Tams
- 2.2. A World Court with a Modest BriefChristian J Tams
- Christian J Tams
- 3.1. Sticking to the Brief: the Court as a Dispute SettlerChristian J Tams
- 3.2. ‘Gradually Moulding International Law’: the Court as an Agent of Legal DevelopmentChristian J Tams
- 4. Concluding ThoughtsChristian J Tams
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 1.1.1. War Measures Against the Property of ‘Ennemis Nationaux’Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 1.1.2. Private Rights and Interests in the Peace TreatiesMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 1.2.1. The Pertinent Provisions in the Peace TreatiesMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 1.2.2. The Competences of the MATsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 1.2.3. The German–US Peace Treaty of 1922Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.1.1. A New Model for the Settlement of International DisputesMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.1.2. Statistical DataMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.2.1. The Judges and the SecretariatsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.2.2. The State AgentsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.2.3. The Position of the Individual ClaimantsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.3. The Procedures AppliedMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.4.1. The Basic RegimeMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.4.2. Concurrent Pending Jurisdiction in National CourtsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 2.4.3. Finality and EnforceabilityMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 3.1.1. National or International TribunalsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 3.1.2. General/Special JurisdictionMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 3.2. Modern ParallelsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 4.1. Nationality and StandingMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 4.2.1. The Debate Among ScholarsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 4.2.2. The Case Law of the MATsMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 5.1. A Preferred Way of Dispute Settlement in the 1920sMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 5.2. A Practical Drawback: The Fragmentation of the Case LawMarta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- 5.3. Are There Lessons to be Learned?Marta Requejo Isidro, Burkhard Hess
- Michel Erpelding Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. Introduction: Mitigating the Side-Effects of Self-DeterminationMichel Erpelding
- Michel Erpelding
- 2.1. Direct Individual Claims for CompensationMichel Erpelding
- 2.2. Indirect Individual ClaimsMichel Erpelding
- 2.3. Evocation ProcedureMichel Erpelding
- 2.4. Power to Create General Binding PrecedentMichel Erpelding
- Michel Erpelding
- 3.1. Setting Up the TribunalMichel Erpelding
- 3.2. Engaging with the Local PopulationMichel Erpelding
- 3.3. Dealing with the States PartiesMichel Erpelding
- 4. Defending the Tribunal’s LegacyMichel Erpelding
- 5. Conclusion: From Upper Silesia to Luxembourg?Michel Erpelding
- Didier Boden Download Kapitel (PDF)
- Didier Boden
- 1.1. Article 43 of the Annex to the 1907 Hague ConventionDidier Boden
- Didier Boden
- 1.2.1. The Majority’s InterpretationDidier Boden
- 1.2.2. The Interpretation of de Ryckère and Benoidt.Didier Boden
- 1.2.3. ‘Whereas the Independence of the Belgian Courts Has Been Infringed...’Didier Boden
- Didier Boden
- 2.1. Categories of Possible EffectsDidier Boden
- Didier Boden
- 2.2.1. Criminal LawDidier Boden
- 2.2.2. Contract LawDidier Boden
- 2.2.3. International Private Law (Outside Occupied Belgium)Didier Boden
- 3. EpilogueDidier Boden
- Jennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon Download Kapitel (PDF)
- 1. IntroductionJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon
- 2. Translating Foundational MomentsJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon
- 3. Ottoman Courts-MartialJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon
- 4. Art as a Means of Making VisibleJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon
- 5. Flowers of WarJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon
- 6. Peace Through Law: ConclusionJennifer Balint, Neal Haslem, Kirsten Haydon




