3,764 research outputs found
The ambivalent shadow of the pre-Wilsonian rise of international law
The generation of American international lawyers who founded the American Society of International Law in 1906 and nurtured the soil for what has been retrospectively called a âmoralistic legalistic approach to international relationsâ remains little studied. A survey of the rise of international legal literature in the U.S. from the mid-19th century to the eve of the Great War serves as a backdrop to the examination of the boosting effect on international law of the Spanish American War in 1898. An examination of the Insular Cases before the US Supreme Court is then accompanied by the analysis of a number of influential factors behind the pre-war rise of international law in the U.S. The work concludes with an examination of the rise of natural law doctrines in international law during the interwar period and the critiques addressed.by the realist founders of the field of âinternational relationsâ to the âmoralistic legalistic approach to international relation
Third Way Environmentalism
This paper is explaining the important design phases of dimensioning an unmanned conventional aircraft from scratch and will also design one according to a few chosen requirements. The design phases discussed will be all from wing dimensioning to stability and spin recovery, aircraft performance requirements and how to select a motor which overcomes these. As well as the optimal rate of climb for improved efficiency is discussed. In the end an aircraft which manages the set requirements and is stable in pitch managing spin recovery with no problem will have been dimensioned
Vortices Clustering: The Origin of the Second Peak in the Magnetisation Loops of High Temperature Superconductors
We study vortex clustering in type II Superconductors. We demonstrate that
the ``second peak'' observed in magnetisation loops may be a dynamical effect
associated with a density driven instability of the vortex system. At the
microscopic level the instability shows up as the clustering of individual
vortices at (rare) preferential regions of the pinning potential. In the limit
of quasi-static ramping the instability is related to a phase transition in the
equilibrium vortex system.Comment: 11 pages + 3 figure
h analogue of Newton's binomial formula
In this letter, the --analogue of Newton's binomial formula is obtained in
the --deformed quantum plane which does not have any --analogue. For
, this is just the usual one as it should be. Furthermore, the binomial
coefficients reduce to for . \\ Some properties of the
--binomial coefficients are also given. \\ Finally, I hope that such results
will contribute to an introduction of the --analogue of the well--known
functions, --special functions and --deformed analysis.Comment: 6 pages, latex Jounal-ref: J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 31 (1998) L75
Transnational Private Regulatory Governance: Ambiguities of Public Authority and Private Power
Cosmic censorship and spherical gravitational collapse with tangential pressure
We study the spherical gravitational collapse of a compact object under the
approximation that the radial pressure is identically zero, and the tangential
pressure is related to the density by a linear equation of state. It turns out
that the Einstein equations can be reduced to the solution of an integral for
the evolution of the area radius. We show that for positive pressure there is a
finite region near the center which necessarily expands outwards, if collapse
begins from rest. This region could be surrounded by an inward moving one which
could collapse to a singularity - any such singularity will necessarily be
covered by a horizon. For negative pressure the entire object collapses
inwards, but any singularities that could arise are not naked. Thus the nature
of the evolution is very different from that of dust, even when the ratio of
pressure to density is infinitesimally small.Comment: 16 pages, Latex file, two figures, uses epsf.st
The Chagos Islands cases: the empire strikes back
Good governance requires the accommodation of multiple interests in the cause of decision making. However, undue regard for particular sectional interests can take their toll upon public faith in government administration. Historically, broad conceptions of the good of the commonwealth were employed to outweigh the interests of groups that resisted colonisation. In the decision making of the British Empire, the standard approach for justifying the marginalisation of the interests of colonised groups was that they were uncivilised and that particular hardships were the price to be paid for bringing to them the imperial dividend of industrial society. It is widely assumed that with the dismantling of the British Empire, such impulses and their accompanying jurisprudence became a thing of the past. Even as decolonisation proceeded apace after the Second World War, however, the United Kingdom maintained control of strategically important islands with a view towards sustaining its global role. In an infamous example from this twilight period of empire, in the 1960s imperial interests were used to justify the expulsion of the Chagos islanders from the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). Into the twenty-first century, this forced elision of the UKâs interests with the imperial âcommon goodâ continues to take centre stage in courtroom battles over the islandersâ rights, being cited before domestic and international tribunals in order to maintain the Chagossiansâ exclusion from their homeland. This article considers the new jurisprudence of imperialism which has emerged in a string of decisions which have continued to marginalise the Chagossiansâ interests
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