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

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  1. Ramón Hernández, “Th e Internationalization of Francisco de Vitoria and Do-
    mingo de Soto,” 15 Fordham Int’l L. J. 1031– 59 (1991), 1057.

  2. Hanke, Spanish Struggle, 124– 25.

  3. Ibid., 120.

  4. Ibid., 129– 30.

  5. Parry, Spanish Th eory, 57.

  6. Richard Tuck, Th e Rights of War and Peace: Po liti cal Th ought and the Interna-
    tional Order from Grotius to Kant (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 75; and
    Hernández, “Internationalization,” 1051– 52.

  7. Parry, Spanish Th eory, 14 – 15.

  8. Hanke, Spanish Struggle, 130– 31.

  9. Grewe, ed., Fontes, vol. 1, 349. See also, to the same eff ect, John of Legnano,
    Tractatus de Bello, 232.

  10. Muldoon, Popes, 5– 14.

  11. Ibid., 285.

  12. Hanke, Spanish Struggle, 163– 65.

  13. Ibid., 165– 68.

  14. Ibid., 167.

  15. Pagden, Lords of All the World, 48.

  16. Anthony Pagden, “Law, Colonization, Legitimation, and the Eu ro pe an Back-
    ground,” in Th e Cambridge History of Law in America: Early America (1580– 1815), ed.
    Michael Grossberg and Christopher Tomlins, 1– 31 (Cambridge: Cambridge Univer-
    sity Press, 2008), 22– 24.

  17. Hanke, Spanish Struggle, 14 8.

  18. Muldoon, Americas, 98.

  19. Richard Zouche, An Exposition of Fecial Law and Procedure, or of Law between
    Nations, and Questions Concerning the Same, trans. J. L. Brierly (Washington, DC:
    Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1911 [1650]), 80; and Seed, Ceremonies, 9– 10.

  20. Vitoria, “On the American Indians,” 264– 65.

  21. Pagden, “Law, Colonization,” 19.

  22. Jean- Philippe Lévy and André Castaldo, Histoire du droit civil (Paris: Dalloz), 534.

  23. Emmerich de Vattel, Th e Law of Nations; or, Th e Principles of Natural Law Ap-
    plied to the Conduct and to the Aff airs of the Nations and Sovereigns, trans. Charles G.
    Fenwick (Washington, DC: Carnegie Institution, 1916 [1758]), 37– 38. See also Georg
    Cavallar, Imperfect Cosmopolis: Studies in the History of International Legal Th eory
    and Cosmopolitan Ideas (Cardiff : University of Wales Press, 2011), 33– 35; and Benton
    and Straumann, “Acquiring Empire,” 25– 26.

  24. Pagden, “Law, Colonization,” 6– 7.

  25. Mark D. Walters, “Mohegan Indians v. Connecticut (1705– 1773) and the Legal
    Status of Aboriginal Customary Laws and Government in British North America,” 33
    Osgoode Hall L. J. 785– 829 (1995), 790– 91.

  26. Pagden, “Law, Colonization,” 24.


504 Notes to Pages 122–130

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