1. | Boltho, Andrea : The return of free trade?, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The return of free trade? / Boltho, Andrea REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International affairs : vol. 72: no. 2., p. 247-260. - London : Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1996. - ISSN 0020-5850 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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2. | Garvey, Jack I. : Trade law and quality of life - dispute resolution under the NAFTA, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Trade law and quality of life - dispute resolution under the NAFTA : side accords on labor and the environment / Garvey, Jack I. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): American journal of international law : vol. 89; no. 2., p. 439-453. - Washington, D. C. : American Society of International Law, 1995. - ISSN 0002-9300 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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3. | Steinberg, Richard H. : Trade-environment negotiations in the EU, NAFTA and WTO, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Trade-environment negotiations in the EU, NAFTA and WTO : regional trajectories of rule development / Steinberg, Richard H. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): American journal of international law : vol. 91; no. 2., p. 231-267. - Washington, D. C. : American Society of International Law, 1997. - ISSN 0002-9300 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): SEA; TEU; |
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4. | Schoenbaum, Thomas J. : International trade and protection of the environment, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial International trade and protection of the environment : the continuing search for recociliation / Schoenbaum, Thomas J. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): American journal of international law : vol. 91; no. 2., p. 268-313. - Washington, D. C. : American Society of International Law, 1997. - ISSN 0002-9300 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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5. | van Houtte, Hans : The law of international trade, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The law of international trade / van Houtte, Hans, xli, 429 p.. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 1995. ISBN 0-421-480904 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Charter of economic rights and duties of states; Lomé convention (IV); |
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6. | Sand, Peter H. : Whither CITES, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Whither CITES : the evolution of a treaty regime in the borderland of trade and environment / Sand, Peter H. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law [=EJIL] = Journal européen de droit international : vol. 8; no. 1., p. 29-58. - Firenze : European University Institute, 1997. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: In June 1997, the Conference of the Parties to the Washington Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)2 will hold its tenth regular meeting in Harare, Zimbabwe. After twenty years in force, the treaty stands at a crossroads - and in the focus of global debate on the future relationship between trade and environment. The present analysis will attempt to review the past performance of the CITES regime, assess its innovative contributions to international law in the field of sustainable development, and consider its prospects for growth. I. The Problem of Wildlife Trade: Commodity or Taboo? The worldwide commercial exchange of wildlife (live animals and plants) and wildlife products (hides and furskins, ivory, timberwood and other derivatives) is big business - valued at between US$5-50 billion annually.3 The predominant direction of the trade is South-to-North, mainly driven by consumer demand from affluent developed countries and their profitable fashion and food industries as well as by users of rare animals and plants for medical/pharmaceutical research, exhibition or collection purposes.4 A characteristic feature of the trade is its luxury orientation, in response to consumption patterns often ranging from the non-essential to the perverse.5 While exports of wildlife and wildlife products are thus a significant source of foreign currency revenue for a number of countries, especially in the Third World, unsustainable rates of harvesting have led to serious depletion and, in a growing number of cases, exhaustion of the particular resource. Wildlife species are indeed renewable natural resources but, like many `flow resources', they have a critical level below which a decrease in reproduction capacity becomes virtually irreversible6 - even through artificial conservation measures (such as captive breeding in zoological gardens or propagation in botanical centres) may still postpone the moment of biological extinction.7 The need to prevent extinction can be justified scientifically as well as economically, but ultimately depends on ethical (anthropocentric or biocentric) value judgements.8 Man-made risks to the survival of wild fauna and flora are well documented and monitored, especially in the Red Data Books compiled since 1966 by the Species Survival Commission of the World Conservation Union (IUCN).9 Commercial exploitation for trade is not, of course, the only cause of wildlife depletion. Destruction of natural habitats is generally recognized as the single most important threat,10 followed by the introduction of alien species. Other contributing factors include inadequate methods of harvesting or processing that may render utilization unsustainable.11 Hence, there is no simple mono-causal link between trade and the conservation status of a species according to its IUCN Red List category ('vulnerable', 'endangered', 'critically endangered').12 By the same token, international approaches to species conservation address a wide range of issues and primarily focus on habitat protection,13 in spite of the constraints which the 'territorial imperative' (of national sovereignty over most of the world's biological resources)14 traditionally imposes on a regulatory regime. Yet trade was readily identified as an issue for which precautionary transnational action is both feasible and necessary - not only to avoid aggravating a multiple-cause ecological problem, but also to prevent a 'free rider' dilemma lest unilateral bans penalize individual importing or exporting countries vis-à-vis their less scrupulous competitors. Thus, economic concerns for the 'level playing field' in a sizeable world market also played a role in the diplomatic negotiations on a global regime for trade in endangered species. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): London convention; |
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7. | Leary, Virginia A. : The WTO and the social clause : Post-Singapore, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The WTO and the social clause : Post-Singapore / Leary, Virginia A. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law [=EJIL] = Journal européen de droit international : vol. 8; no. 1., p. 118-122. - Firenze : European University Institute, 1997. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: In December 1996, the first Ministerial Conference of the newly created World Trade Organization (WTO) was held in Singapore. The Conference attracted considerable attention, particularly the negotiations concerning the controversial issue of the `social clause' - the linking of labour standards with trade liberalization. A compromise on the issue resulted in a paragraph on labour standards in the final Declaration of the Conference, the first time that a reference to such standards was included in a WTO official document. At first blush, the paragraph appears to close the door to further consideration of the link of trade with labour standards within the WTO, but this is unlikely to be the case. The efforts to examine the link between labour standards and trade within the WTO will continue after Singapore. The WTO was established at Marrakesh in 1994 at the conclusion of the Uruguay Round to provide an institution to administer the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and other Uruguay Round agreements as well as to provide a more effective dispute resolution mechanism than existed under GATT. The subject of a social clause was discussed at Marrakesh, but no decision was taken on the subject. While a Committee on Trade and Environment was set up as a result of pressure from developed countries, no WTO committee or working group was created on labour standards and trade. The only mention of the subject at Marrakesh was a brief reference in the Chairman's lengthy list of issues that could eventually be considered in the WTO work programme. The Ministerial Conference meets every two years and is the highest WTO authority. At the first Conference in Singapore a number of important issues, in addition to the social clause, were on the agenda. A virtually complete agreement on Information Technology was adopted at the Conference, working groups were established to examine the relationship between trade and the areas of investment, competition policy and government procurement, the Committee on Trade and Environment was established as a permanent WTO body, and the WTO signed a cooperative agreement with the IMF, similar to an agreement earlier signed with the World Bank. Several months after Singapore a much-heralded agreement on telecommunications was adopted. Once again, the ministers refused at Singapore to set up a committee or working party on trade and labour standards. INDEX WORDS:
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8. | Nunnenkamp, Peter : Winners and losers in the global economy, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Winners and losers in the global economy : recent trends in the international division of labor, major implications and critical policy challenges / Nunnenkamp, Peter REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: German yearbook of international law [=GYIL] : vol. 39, p. 42-82. - Berlin : Ducker & Humblot, 1997. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 3-428-09179-5 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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9. | Peifer, Karl-Nikolaus : Brainpower and trade, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Brainpower and trade : the impact of TRIPS on intellectual property / Peifer, Karl-Nikolaus REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: German yearbook of international law [=GYIL] : vol. 39, p. 100-133. - Berlin : Ducker & Humblot, 1997. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 3-428-09179-5 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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10. | Lücke, Matthias : Accession of the CIS countries to the World Trade Organization, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Accession of the CIS countries to the World Trade Organization / Lücke, Matthias REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: German yearbook of international law [=GYIL] : vol. 39, p. 134-163. - Berlin : Ducker & Humblot, 1997. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 3-428-09179-5 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: CIS states / USSR |
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11. | Verdirame, Guglielmo : The definition of developing countries under GATT and other international law, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series The definition of developing countries under GATT and other international law / Verdirame, Guglielmo REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: German yearbook of international law [=GYIL] : vol. 39, p. 164-197. - Berlin : Ducker & Humblot, 1997. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 3-428-09179-5 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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12. | Part III : General reports and discussions, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a monograph Part III : General reports and discussions : E. environmental law / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Law in motion : recent developments in civil procedure, constitutional, contract, criminal, environment, family & succession, intellectual property, labour, medical, social security, transport law / Blanpain, Roger (ed.), p. 529-626. - Hague : Kluwer, 1997. ISBN 90-411-0386-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: The articles are:. 1. Equality before the law - a quest for international justice in face of the environment, by Maria Luisa Faro Magalhaes. 2. Agriculture and environment, by Margaret Rosso Grossman. 3. The development of legal concepts connected with the protection of the cultural heritage, by Lyndel V. Prott. 4. Working group report : equality before the law in environmental law, by Geert Van Calster. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / Europe / USA / Netherlands / Australia / Nigeria / Lesotho / Tanzania NOTE (MEETINGS): International encyclopaedia of laws : world law conference, Brussels, [19960909-19960912], [C] NOTE (GENERAL): Biodiversity convention; Rio declaration; Global warming treaty; Agenda 21; SEA; TEU; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Florence agreement; Convention for the protection of cultural property in the event of armed conflict; Universal copyright convention; European cultural convention; ECHRP-1; ICESCR-14-15; |
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13. | Vermulst, Edvin : Commercial defence actions and other international trade developments in the European Communities XII, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Commercial defence actions and other international trade developments in the European Communities XII : 1 July 1996-31 December 1996 / Vermulst, Edvin ; Driessen, Bart REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law [=EJIL] = Journal européen de droit international : vol. 8; no. 2., p. 363-384. - Firenze : European University Institute, 1997. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. International Developments Internationally, the highlights of the second half of 1996 were the Singapore Ministerial Meeting and the Information Technology Agreement. A. New Generation Trade Issues In the run-up to the first WTO Ministerial Meeting (9-13 December 1996), much discussion took place both within the Community and within the WTO on the future course of the organization. While the European Community had wanted the meeting to concentrate on stocktaking of the results achieved in the WTO thus far, it also favoured bringing new topics onto the agenda, such as the social clause issue and the environment-trade linkage.4 The first of these was the most sensitive. In July the European Commission issued a paper on the topic.5 It argued for the inclusion of labour standards in the agenda of the Ministerial Meeting and for the creation of a working party in the WTO to discuss the issue. B. Singapore Ministerial Meeting In Singapore the Community achieved only a very qualified success with the inclusion of new trade issues on the WTO's agenda. After protracted negotiations WTO members managed to agree to a Ministerial Declaration. This does not refer to the above 'new issues', other than a passing reference to the importance of core labour standards. However, the Declaration adds that the International Labour Organisation is the proper entity to deal with this matter and, effectively, Asian resistance to the social clause won the day. This is not to say that nothing new came out of Singapore. The most important WTO members agreed to abolish customs tariffs on some 400 pharmaceuticals. The WTO will establish a working group to study the relationship between investment and competition. The most important achievement, however, was the ITA Declaration. C. Information Technology Agreement The Ministers did not manage to sign a finalized agreement in Singapore. However, the main features of the Information Technology Agreement (ITA) have been laid down in the Declaration and the follow-up negotiations have been very successful. The participants in the WTO have agreed to abolish tariffs on information technology products on the most-favoured-nation (MFN) basis by 2000.6 Information technology products include, for example, computers and computer equipment, and virtually all telecommunications equipment. The Decision contains two attachments. The first of these is a list of customs nomenclature (HS) headings which are included in the scope of the deal. The second attachment lists products which are covered wherever they are classified by ITA partners. In the spring of 1997 the ITA partners submitted tariff reduction schedules and it is expected that the ITA will indeed take off as scheduled on 1 July 1997. D. Technical Barriers to Trade The European Commission is preparing the Technical Barriers on Trade (TBT) review. A review of this agreement is foreseen by the WTO Agreement on TBT before the end of 1997.7 The Community considers the 1997 review an important opportunity to improve adherence to the Agreement by other WTO Members. The Community is preparing the review carefully by identifying trade barriers in its major trade partners (see section IV.C below). INDEX WORDS:
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14. | van Dijck, Pitou (ed.) : Challenges to the new World Trade Organization, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Challenges to the new World Trade Organization / van Dijck, Pitou (ed.) ; Faber, Gerrit (ed.) - (Legal aspects of international organization ; vol. 28), xxi, 350 p.. - Hague : Kluwer, 1996. ISBN 90-411-0236-1 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; TEU; Social charter; Agenda 21; Rio declaration; Basel convention; Copenhagen declaration; |
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15. | Reuter, Niklas : Villkorlighet som metod för främjande av mänskliga rättigheter, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Villkorlighet som metod för främjande av mänskliga rättigheter : - en studie av den Europeiska gemenskapens handlande mot tredje land / Reuter, Niklas, v, 109 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi. Rättsvetenskapliga fakulteten, 1997. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Avhandling pro gradu (master's thesis) i folkrätt (public international law), Åbo Akademi, [1997] NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; Declaration on the right to development; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Vienna declaration and programme of action; EEC-treaty; SEA; TEU; Lomé conventions; UN charter; ECHR; Helsinki final act; Charter of Paris; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; LIBRARY LOCATION: ÅAB/handskriftsavdelningen |
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16. | Bring, Ove (ed.) : Current international law issues , 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Current international law issues : Nordic perspectives : essays in honour of Jerzy Sztucki / Bring, Ove (ed.) ; Mahmoudi, Said (ed.), 217 p.. - Stockholm : Fritzes, 1994. ISBN 91-38-50266-6 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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17. | Towards new strategies incorporating the defence of human rights and the promotion of development, 1991 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Towards new strategies incorporating the defence of human rights and the promotion of development / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): SOS torture = OMCT : no. 30-31-32., p. 4-54. - Geneva : World Organisation Against Torture, 1991. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Other articles are:. 1. Report of the human rights sub-commission on the realisation of economic, social and cultural rights. 2. The realisation of the right to development. 3. Trade and development report, 1991. 4. The eigt United Nations conference on trade and development (UNCTAD) and the challenge for development. 5. Report of the United Nations development programme. 6. Reports of the World Bank 1990-1991. 7. International Monetary Fund (IMF) - 1991 annual report. INDEX WORDS:
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18. | Woody, Kristin : The World Trade Organization's Committee on trade and environment, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The World Trade Organization's Committee on trade and environment / Woody, Kristin REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Georgetown international environmental law review : vol. 8; no. 3., p. 459-480. - Washington, DC : Georgetown University Law Center, 1996. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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19. | Ziegler, Andreas R. : Trade and environmental law in the European Community, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Trade and environmental law in the European Community / Ziegler, Andreas R. - (European Community law series), xxxii, 308 p.. - Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1996. ISBN 0-19-8262246-9 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EC treaty; SEA; TEU; LIBRARY LOCATION: EG-rätt |
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20. | McDorman, Ted L. : Iceland, whaling and the U. S. pelly amendment, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Iceland, whaling and the U. S. pelly amendment : the international trade law context / McDorman, Ted L. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Nordic journal of international law : vol. 66; no. 4., p. 453-474. - Hague : Kluwer, 1997. - ISSN 0902-7351 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Iceland / Norway / USA / Canada NOTE (GENERAL): Convention for the regulation of whaling |
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21. | International development aid, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series International development aid / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Democracy, human rights and economic development in Southern Africa / Steytler, N. (ed.) - (Human rights and democracy series), p. 303-358. - Johannesburg : Lex Patria publ., 1997. ISBN 0-628-03659-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: The articles are:. 1. Development by other means? A critical review of development assistance and political conditionalities in Southerns Africa, by Elling Tjonneland. 2. Human rights conditionality as practised by the European Union, by katarina Tomasevski. 3. The Lomé convention and trade between Europe and South Africa, by Xavier Philippe. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Lomé convention; TEU; |
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22. | Peltonen, Mia : Förhållandet mellan GATT-avtalet och miljökonventioner som innehåller handelsbestämmelser, 1998 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Förhållandet mellan GATT-avtalet och miljökonventioner som innehåller handelsbestämmelser / Peltonen, Mia, 103 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi. Ekonomisk-statsvetenskapliga fakulteten, 1998. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Avhandling pro gradu i folkrätt (master's thesis), 1997 NOTE (GENERAL): Rio declaration; African convention on the conservation of nature and natural resources; Vienna Convention on the law of treaties; Convention on conservation of North Pacific fur seals; Convention on nature protection and wild life preservation in the Western Hemisphere; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: avhandlingar |
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23. | Barham, Bradford : Wild rubber , 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Wild rubber : industrial organisation and the microeconomics of extraction during the Amazon rubber boom (1860-1920) / Barham, Bradford ; Coomes, Oliver REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin American studies : vol. 26; no. 1., p. 37-72. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Latin America / South America |
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24. | Pastore, Mario : State-led industrialisation, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial State-led industrialisation : the evidence on Paraguay, 1852-1870 / Pastore, Mario REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin American studies : vol. 26; no. 2., p. 295-324. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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25. | Pastore, Mario : Trade contraction and economic decline, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Trade contraction and economic decline : the Paraguayan economy under Francia, 1810-1840 / Pastore, Mario REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin American studies : vol. 26; no. 3., p. 539-596. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Paraguay |
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26. | Gonzales, Michael J. : United States Copper companies, the state and labour conflict in Mexico, 1900-1910, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial United States Copper companies, the state and labour conflict in Mexico, 1900-1910 / Gonzales, Michael J. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin American studies : vol. 26; no. 3., p. 651-682. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA |
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27. | Porcile, Gabriel : The challenge of cooperation, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The challenge of cooperation : Argentina and Brazil, (1939-1955) / Porcile, Gabriel REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin America studies : vol. 27; no. 1., p. 129-160. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1995. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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28. | Moberg, Mark : Crown colony as Banana Republic, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Crown colony as Banana Republic : the United Fruit Company in British Honduras, 1900-1920 / Moberg, Mark REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of Latin-American studies : vol. 28; no. 2., p. 357-382. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 1996. - ISSN 0022-216X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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29. | Diller, Janelle M. : Child labor, trade and investment , 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Child labor, trade and investment : toward the harmonization of international law / Diller, Janelle M. ; Levy, David A. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): American journal of international law : vol. 91; no. 4., p. 663-696. - Washington, DC : American Society of International Law, 1997. - ISSN 0002-9300 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; CAT; CEDAW; CERD; ECHR; ACHPR; OAS charter; Copenhagen document; Vienna declaration and the platform of action; Convention no. 138 on minimum age; |
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30. | Stoll, Peter-Tobias : Freihandel und Verfassung, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Freihandel und Verfassung : einzelstaatliche Gewährleistung und die konstitutionelle Funktion der Welthandelsordnung (GATT/WTO) / Stoll, Peter-Tobias REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches und Völkerrecht [=ZaöRV] : 57/1., p. 83-146. - Heidelberg : Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, 1997 . - ISSN 0044-2348 LANGUAGE: GER INDEX WORDS:
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