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No matter where you turn, it seems that the taut lines of borders
are vibrating to - or even calling - the tune of global events
Today, there are more borders in the world than ever before in
human history. Beginning with the earliest known example, Crawford
travels to many borders old and new: from a melting glacial
landscape to the conflict-torn West Bank and the fault-lines of the
US/Mexico border. He follows the story of borders into our fragile
and uncertain future - towards the virtual frontiers of the
internet and the shifting geography of a world beset by climate
change. As nationalism, climate change, globalisation, technology
and mass migration all collide with ever-hardening borders,
something has to give. And Crawford asks, is it time to let go of
the lines that divide us?
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ICSID Reports (Hardcover, New)
James Crawford, Karen Lee; Edited by (consulting) Elihu Lauterpacht
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R8,814
Discovery Miles 88 140
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The ICSID Reports provide the only comprehensive published
collection of arbitral awards and decisions given under the
auspices of the World Bank's International Centre for the
Settlement of Investment Disputes or pursuant to other multilateral
or bilateral investment treaties, including in particular the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Energy Charter Treaty
(ECT). These decisions, which are fully indexed, make an important
contribution to the growing body of jurisprudence on international
investment. The ICSID Reports are an invaluable tool for
practitioners and scholars working in the field of international
commercial arbitration or advising foreign investors. Volume 15
includes the decision on jurisdiction and award in Duke Energy v.
Peru, the decision on jurisdiction over the counterclaim, partial
award and Swiss decision in Saluka v. Czech Republic, and the
amended ICSID Arbitration Rules and ICSID (Additional Facility)
Arbitration Rules that came into effect on 10 April 2006.
From the presenter of BBC One's Scotland from the Sky You scramble
up over the dunes of an isolated beach. You climb to the summit of
a lonely hill. You pick your way through the eerie hush of a
forest. And then you find them. The traces of the past. Perhaps
they are marked by a tiny symbol on your map, perhaps not. There
are no plaques to explain their fading presence before you, nothing
to account for what they once were - who made them, lived in them
or abandoned them. Now they are merged with the landscape. They are
being reclaimed by nature. They are wild history. In this book
acclaimed author and presenter James Crawford introduces many such
places all over the country, from the ruins of prehistoric forts
and ancient, arcane burial sites, to abandoned bothies and
boathouses, and the derelict traces of old, faded industry.
Experience a new history of Scotland told through its places.
Writers Kathleen Jamie, Alexander McCall Smith, Alistair Moffat,
James Robertson and James Crawford pick twenty-five buildings to
tell the story of the nation. Travelling across the country, from
abandoned islands and lonely glens to the heart of our modern
cities, these five authors seek out the diverse narrative of the
Scottish people. Follow Kathleen Jamie as she searches for the
traces of our first family hearths in the Cairngorms and makes a
midsummer journey to Shetland to meet the unlikely new inhabitants
of an Iron Age broch. Tour the wondrous and macabre Surgeons' Hall
with Alexander McCall Smith, or walk with him over sacred ground to
Iona's ancient Abbey. Join Alistair Moffat as he discovers a lost
whisky village in the wilds of Strathconon, and climbs up through
the vertiginous layers of history in Edinburgh Castle. Accompany
James Robertson as he goes from the standing stones of Callanish to
the humble cottage of Hugh MacDiarmid - via the engineering
colossus of the Forth Rail Bridge. And journey with James Crawford
from a packed crowd in Hampden Park, to an off-the-grid eco-bothy
on the Isle of Eigg. Who Built Scotland is a landmark exploration
of Scotland's social, political and cultural histories. Moving from
Neolithic families, exiled hermits and ambitious royal dynasties to
highland shieling girls, peasant poets, Enlightenment philosophers
and iconoclastic artists, it places our people, our ideas and our
passions at the heart of our architecture and archaeology. This is
the remarkable story how we have shaped our buildings and how our
buildings, in turn, have shaped us.
As the glaciers of the last Ice Age receded, humans ventured into
the far north, exploring a wild, fertile territory. Nomadic
hunter-gatherers at first, they made the decision to stay for good
- to farm and to build. The landscapes they lived on were
remarkable in their diversity. Vast forests of pine and birch ran
through one of the world's oldest mountain ranges - once as high as
the Himalayas but over millennia scoured and compressed by sheets
of ice a mile thick. On hundreds of islands around a saw-edged
coastline, communities flourished, linked to each other and the
wider world by the sea, the transport superhighway of ancient
times. It was a place of challenges and opportunity. A place we
know today as Scotland. Over the past 10,000 years, every inch of
Scotland - whether remote hilltop, fertile floodplain, or
storm-lashed coastline - has been shaped, changed and moulded by
its people. No part of the land is without its human story. From
Orkney's immaculately preserved Neolithic villages to Highland
glens stripped of nineteenth century settlements, from a Skye
peninsula converted to an ingenious Viking shipyard, to a sheer
Hebridean clifftop used as the site of a spectacular lighthouse,
Scotland's history is written into its landscapes in vivid detail.
Scotland's Landscapes tells the enduring story of this interaction
between man and his environment. Stunning new imagery from the
National Collection of Aerial Photography comes together to build
up a picture of a dramatic terrain forged by thousands of years of
incredible change. These are Scotland's landscapes as you have
never seen or understood them before.
'What we build always reveals things that are deeply and innately
human. Because all buildings are stories, one way or another.'
Kathleen Jamie, Alexander McCall Smith, Alistair Moffat, James
Robertson and James Crawford travel across the country to tell the
story of the nation, from abandoned islands and lonely glens to the
heart of our modern cities. Whether visiting Shetland's Mousa Broch
at midsummer, following in the footsteps of pilgrims to Iona Abbey,
joining the tourist bustle at Edinburgh Castle, scaling the Forth
Bridge or staying in an off-the-grid eco-bothy, the authors unravel
the stories of the places, people and passions that have had an
enduring impact on the landscape and character of Scotland.
Bilingualism is a reality that many Americans still find difficult
to accept; hence the prominence of English-only activism in U.S.
politics. This collection of essays analyzes the sources of the
anti-bilingual movement, its changing directions, and its impact on
education policy. The book also explores efforts to resist the
English-only trend, including projects to revitalize Native
American languages.
The ICSID Reports provide the only comprehensive collection of the
arbitral awards and decisions given under the auspices of the World
Bank's International Centre for the Settlement of Investment
Disputes or pursuant to other multilateral or bilateral investment
treaties. These decisions make an important contribution to the
growing body of jurisprudence on international investment. The
series also includes arbitration under the Additional Facility to
the ICSID Convention which has increased in recent years, most
notably in relation to the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA). The ICSID Reports are an invaluable tool for practitioners
and scholars working in the field of international commercial
arbitration. Volume 9 of the ICSID Reports includes the hitherto
unpublished annulment decision in the Amco Asia case, the TV
Nova/Czech Republic saga, and the first Canadian appellate court
decision on NAFTA Chapter 11 arbitration and the standard of
review.
Aerofilms Ltd was born on 9 May 1919. An unprecedented business
venture, it hoped to marry the still fledgling technology of
powered flight to the discipline of photography. Its founders were
Claude Grahame-White, an internationally-famous English aviation
pioneer, and Francis Lewis Wills, a trained architect who had flown
as an observer for the Royal Naval Air Service during the First
World War. Together they embarked on a distinctively British tale
of derring-do. From developing photographic glass plates in a hotel
bathroom at the London Flying Club in Hendon, to producing many
thousands of aerial images every year, they took a tool which had
first been used for military intelligence, and repackaged it for
the mass market. As a result, Aerofilms lived through and recorded
one of the most tumultuous periods in British history. After
surviving the worldwide economic crash of the Great Depression in
the 1930s, and serving their country at the request of Winston
Churchill during the Second World War, they were still on hand to
help shape the Britain of the future, capturing the major
reconstruction projects of the 1940s and 50s. Aerofilms: A History
of Britain From Above draws on thousands of images, including many
that are rare or previously unseen, to present a vivid picture of
the nation in the first half of the twentieth century. Following
the company's enigmatic founders, daredevil pilots, skilled
photographers and innovative advertisers, it explores how they
manufactured and sold a potent sense of place and identity to the
British people. The story of Aerofilms - the men and women behind
the company and the photographs that they produced - is a story of
innovation, entrepreneurial spirit, war, marketing and the making
of 'Brand Britain'.
Annexed to GA Resolution 56/83 of 2001, the International Law
Commission's Articles on Responsibility for Internationally
Wrongful Acts put the international law of responsibility on a
sound footing. As Special Rapporteur for the second reading, James
Crawford helped steer it to a successful conclusion. With this
book, he provides a detailed analysis of the general law of
international responsibility and the place of state responsibility
in particular within that framework. It serves as a companion to
The International Law Commission's Articles on State
Responsibility: Introduction, Text and Commentaries (Cambridge,
2002) and is essential reading for scholars and practitioners
concerned with issues of international responsibility, whether they
arise in interstate relations, in the context of arbitration or
litigation, or in bringing international claims.
Today, there are more borders in the world than ever before in
human history. In this book James Crawford argues that our enduring
obsession with borders has brought us to a crisis point: that we
are entering the endgame of a process that began thousands of years
ago, when we first started dividing up the earth. Beginning with
the earliest known marker which denoted the end of one land and the
beginning of the next, Crawford follows the story of borders into
our fragile and uncertain future - towards the virtual frontiers of
the internet, and the shifting geography of a world beset by
climate change. In the process, he travels to many borders old and
new: from a melting border high in the glacial landscapes of the
Austrian-Italian Alps to the only place on land where Europe and
Africa meet; from the artist Banksy's 'Walled Off Hotel' in the
conflict-torn West Bank to the Sonoran Desert and the fault lines
of the US/Mexico border. Combining history, travel and reportage,
The Edge of the Plain explores how borders have grown and evolved
to take control of our landscapes, our memories, our identities and
our destinies. As nationalism, climate change, globalisation,
technology and mass migration all collide with ever-hardening
borders, something has to give. And Crawford asks, is it time to
let go of the lines that divide us?
Annexed to GA Resolution 56/83 of 2001, the International Law
Commission's Articles on Responsibility for Internationally
Wrongful Acts put the international law of responsibility on a
sound footing. As Special Rapporteur for the second reading, James
Crawford helped steer it to a successful conclusion. With this
book, he provides a detailed analysis of the general law of
international responsibility and the place of state responsibility
in particular within that framework. It serves as a companion to
The International Law Commission's Articles on State
Responsibility: Introduction, Text and Commentaries (Cambridge
University Press, 2002) and is essential reading for scholars and
practitioners concerned with issues of international
responsibility, whether they arise in interstate relations, in the
context of arbitration or litigation, or in bringing international
claims.
Originally published by Hersch Lauterpacht in 1947, this book
presents a detailed study of recognition in international law,
examining its crucial significance in relation to statehood,
governments and belligerency. The author develops a strong argument
for positioning recognition within the context of international
law, reacting against the widely accepted conception of it as an
area of international politics. Numerous examples of the use of law
and conscious adherence to legal principle in the practice of
states are used to give weight to this perspective. This paperback
re-issue in 2012 includes a newly commissioned Foreword by James
Crawford, Whewell Professor of International Law at the University
of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge.
This intellectually rigorous introduction to international law
encourages readers to engage with multiple aspects of the topic: as
'law' directing and shaping its subjects; as a technique for
governing the world of states and beyond statehood; and as a
framework within which several critical and constructivist projects
are articulated. The articles situate international law in its
historical and ideological context and examine core concepts such
as sovereignty, jurisdiction and the state. Attention is also given
to its operation within international institutions and in dispute
settlement, and a separate section is devoted to international
law's 'projects': protecting human rights, eradicating poverty, the
conservation of resources, the regulation of international trade
and investment and the establishment of international order. The
diverse group of contributors draws from disciplinary orientations
ranging from positivism to postmodernism to ensure that this book
is informed theoretically and politically, as well as grounded in
practice.
The International Law Commission's Articles, adopted in 2001, mark a major step in international law. They define when there has been a breach of international law and the consequences of such breaches. They show how international law now allows for categories of general public interest-- human rights, the environment, etc... Including a full introduction, the text of the Articles and commentary, plus a guide to the legislative history, a detailed index and table of cases, this volume will be an indispensable accompaniment to the ILC's work on this vital topic.
Every state in the world has undertaken human rights obligations on the basis of United Nations treaties. Today's challenge is to enhance the effectiveness of procedures and institutions established to promote the accountability of governments. This volume contains detailed analyses of the strengths and weaknesses of the system, written by leading participants in the work of the treaty bodies. Their recommendations provide a blueprint for far-reaching reform of a system of major importance for the future of international efforts to protect human rights.
Since 1945, the UN has been actively engaged in conceptualizing
strategies for both economic development and a sustainable
environment. From a broad historical perspective, Development
without Destruction sketches the role played by organizations and
individuals in the UN system in developing and consolidating
principles of international law and international governance with
respect to natural resource management. Nico Schrijver highlights
the UN's efforts to generate and implement strategies to resolve
tensions between economic development and environmental protection,
conservation and exploitation, sovereignty and internationalism,
and armed conflict and peaceful access to natural resources.
Schrijver's thorough analysis is an indispensable guide to
management of the critical environmental issues on today's global
agenda.
Systems-based practice exams based on past papers. Working through
past papers is an essential part of exam preparation and practice
questions such as the ones in this book are a vital resource for
medical school success. The questions represent common, universal
medical themes and practising them in a question and answer style
will bolster your learning of key facts and help you to remember
them for exams and ultimately clinical practice. The book takes a
systems-based approach, with answers presented in a way that will
consolidate your knowledge: they are succinct and to the point. The
practice papers in this book have been written to help you ace your
exams by testing your knowledge, improving your exam technique, and
working on your time management!
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