The latest issue of Jus Gentium: Journal of International Legal History (Vol. 3, no. 1, 2018) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
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- V.G. Butkevych, The International-Legal Ideology of Pre-Slavic Chiefdoms of the Ukrainian Ethnos (Part Four)
- Mark Somos, Boston in the State of Nature, 1761-1765: The Birth of an American Constitutional Trope
- Christopher Rossi, The Gulf of Fonseca and International Law: Condominium or Anti-Colonial Imperialism?
- Amy Kellam, Suzerainty and the 1914 Simla Agreement
- V. Popovski, Raphael Lemkin: Inventing and Codifying Genocide
- Notes and Comments
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- M. Mulligan, The Status of Egypt After the 1840 Convention of London
- V. S. Ivanenko, Private International Law in Russia: The Earliest Work
- L. Anufrieva, Myths and Facts of the Russian Science of Private International Law: The Legacy of M. I. Brun
- V.V. Veeder, Looking for Professor B. E. Nolde
- International Legal Doctrine
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- W.E. Butler, The Abbé Ferdinando Galiani and Neutrality
- Abbé Galiani, On the Reciprocal Rights of Belligerents and Neutrals
New Issue: Jus Gentium: Journal of International Legal History
Reviewed by Ladi Michael
on
March 19, 2018
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