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"Sociology Projects: A Students' Guide" is a practical guide to
project work for sociology students. It includes advice on how to
choose a manageable topic, checklists, where to look for useful
documents, how not to get overwhelmed by data, when to prepare and
how to evaluate a questionnaire, ways of presenting your material
to best effect and how to anticipate both the possibilities and the
pitfalls of a sociological project.
Although a State's treatment of foreign investors has long been
regulated by international law, it is only recently that
international investment law has emerged as an independent
discipline in its own right. In recent decades the practical
success of investment arbitration has allowed international
investment law to develop both its own cadre of academic and
professional specialists and its own legal doctrines. This book
analyses the structure of international investment law, as it has
developed through the practice of investment arbitration in order
to see how a variety of international investment law doctrines
should be understood and applied. The book demonstrates how a
structural analysis can shed light on several major controversies
within investment law and also examines what an "investment"
actually is. The book offers an original interpretative approach to
the resolution of problems in international investment law, and so
is one of the few books within the field to attempt to give
investment law a solid theoretical basis. It also focuses on only a
select number of problems, rather than attempting to deliver the
universal coverage currently popular for investment law books. As a
result, those issues that are addressed get a detailed discussion
rarely available in competing texts.
Although a State s treatment of foreign investors has long been
regulated by international law, it is only recently that
international investment law has emerged as an independent
discipline in its own right. In recent decades the practical
success of investment arbitration has allowed international
investment law to develop both its own cadre of academic and
professional specialists and its own legal doctrines. This book
analyses the structure of international investment law, as it has
developed through the practice of investment arbitration in order
to see how a variety of international investment law doctrines
should be understood and applied. The book demonstrates how a
structural analysis can shed light on several major controversies
within investment law and also examines what an "investment"
actually is. The book offers an original interpretative approach to
the resolution of problems in international investment law, and so
is one of the few books within the field to attempt to give
investment law a solid theoretical basis. It also focuses on only a
select number of problems, rather than attempting to deliver the
universal coverage currently popular for investment law books. As a
result, those issues that are addressed get a detailed discussion
rarely available in competing texts.
Understanding International Arbitration introduces students to the
primary concepts necessary for an understanding of arbitration,
making use of illustrative case examples and references to legal
practice throughout. This text offers a comprehensive overview of
the subject for those new to arbitration. Making use of a unique
two-part structure in each chapter, Understanding International
Arbitration provides a clear and simple statement of rules,
followed by detailed discussion of the ideas underlying those
rules, illustrated with relevant comparative law and case examples.
Designed with students of arbitration in mind, this text provides
both a clear introduction to the subject and a comprehensive course
text that will support students in their preparation for exams and
practical assessments.
First Published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor and
Francis, an informa company.
This book traces the development of collective welfare provision
from the Poor Laws onward, explaining the influences of different
social reformers and thinkers. Comparisons are made between the UK,
the USA and Canada.
A collection of short stories written for a period of four and a
half years. Different stories, different adventures meant to
intrigue and entertain readers.
The outbreak of WW1 saw the Royal Dublin Fusiliers mobilized and
shipped to secure the oil fields in the middle East. Little did
they know they would be used to advance up the Biblical river
Euphrates to to be slaughtered by the waiting Turks.
A young man sets off on an odyssey that takes him around the world.
An IRA freedom fighter Liam Connelly teams up with a Germany
fighter pilot to escape England and flee to France to join the
French Foreign Legion. Liam grows up quickly in the African desert
and the jungles of Vietnam and takes part in the final battle of
Dien Bien Phu.
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