Justice among Nations. A History of International Law - Stephen C. Neff

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  1. Woolsey, Introduction, 411.

  2. Lassa Oppenheim, “Th e Science of International Law: Its Task and Method,” 2
    AJIL 313– 56 (1908), 355.

  3. I bid., 356.

  4. On Schücking, see La Pradelle, Maîtres et doctrines, 337– 44.

  5. Chickering, Imperial Germany, 177– 78.

  6. See Schücking, International Union.


Part IV. Between Yesterday and Tomorrow (1914– )
Epigraph: Wolfgang Friedmann, “Th e Disintegration of Eu ro pe an Civilisation and
the Future of International Law: Some Observations on the Social Foundations of
Law,” 2 MLR 194– 214 (1938), 213.


  1. Dreams Born and Shattered

  2. In support of the lawfulness of the Ruhr occupation was George A. Finch, “Th e
    Legality of the Occupation of the Ruhr Valley,” 17 AJIL 724– 33 (1923). Opposing the
    lawfulness were Arnold D. McNair, “Th e Legality of the Occupation of the Ruhr,” 5
    BYBIL 17– 37 (1924); and Ernest J. Schuster, “Th e Question as to the Legality of the
    Ruhr Occupation,” 18 AJIL 407– 18 (1924).

  3. Th e S.S. Wimbledon, PCIJ, ser. A, no. 1.

  4. Franz von Liszt, “Th e Reconstruction of International Law,” 64 U. Penn. L. Rev.
    765– 73 (1916), 767.

  5. See A. de La Pradelle, Maîtres et doctrines du droit des gens, 2nd ed. (Paris: Édi-
    tions internationales, 1950), 371– 403.

  6. See Chapter 7.

  7. See Michael Streeter, Epitácio Pessôa (London: Haus, 2010).

  8. Th ey were Anzilotti, Bustamante, de Visscher, Hudson, Hurst, Koo, Pessôa,
    Rolin- Jaequemyns, Schücking, and Winiarski.

  9. Report of the Commission on the Responsibility of the Authors of the War and
    on the Enforcement of Penalties, Mar. 29, 1919, 14 AJIL 95– 154 (1920).

  10. Ibid., 127– 51.

  11. Treaty of Versailles, June 26, 1919, 225 CTS 188, art. 231.

  12. Ibid., art. 227.

  13. Robert Lansing, “Some Legal Questions of the Peace Conference,” 13 AJIL 631–
    50 (1919), 647– 48.

  14. On the refusal of the Netherlands to extradite William II, see James Brown
    Scott, “Th e Trial of the Kaiser,” in Edward Mandell House and Charles Seymour, eds.,
    What Really Happened at Paris: Th e Story of the Peace Conference, 1918– 1919, 231– 58
    (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1921), 240– 45.


536 Notes to Pages 339–350

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