Supreme Court cases touching on international law, 1914.

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Supreme Court cases touching on international law, 1914.

Contains work done for the Carnegie Endowment as instructed by Professor Eugene Wambaugh of Harvard Law School. The cases deal with international law, including questions of admiralty and prize questions between states which have a bearing on international law such as boundary, and also questions of jurisdiction, citizenship, and domicile.

216 p. ; 21 cm.

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United States. Supreme Court

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Supreme Court of the United States, final court of appeal and final expositor of the Constitution of the United States. Within the framework of litigation, the Supreme Court marks the boundaries of authority between state and nation, state and state, and government and citizen. Scope And Jurisdiction The Supreme Court was created by the Constitutional Convention of 1787 as the head of a federal court system, though it was not formally established until Congress passed the Judiciary Act in 17...

Gallup, Dana Taylor, d. 1943.

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Wambaugh, Eugene, 1856-1940

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Wambaugh was a professor at the Harvard Law School from 1892-1925. His career included terms as member of the board of editors for the American Political Science Review (1906-1913), special counsel to the U.S. State Department (1914), delegate to the Pan American Scientific Congress (1915-1916) and Counsel of the Peruvian Government on Tacna-Arica Plebiscite (1925-26). From the description of Letter to James McCauley Landis, 9 May, 1938. (Harvard Law School Library). WorldCat record ...