| Laurent Goetschel - 1998 - Страниц: 306
...modern state, as it emerged from the Peace of Westphalia, can be understood in Morgenthau's words as ,,the supreme legal authority of the nation to give...other nation and equality with it under international law."30 Thus 27 Especially in regard to defense issues. ; Holl (1983), p. 13 (see note no. 4). 29 Daniel... | |
| Francis X. Winters - 1999 - Страниц: 314
...about the deployment of US forces. Sovereignty is defined by the political theorist Hans Morgenthau as "the supreme legal authority of the nation to give...nation and equality with it under international law. Hence, the nation loses its sovereignty when it is placed under the authority of another nation, so... | |
| Richard Appelbaum, William Felstiner, Volkmar Gessner - 2001 - Страниц: 443
...recognition. The most important component of this dimension is the principle of sovereignty, that is, "the supreme legal authority of the nation to give...with it under international law" (Morgenthau, 1967: 305). From a historical perspective, it was recognition as an international legal subject which ultimately... | |
| Robert Owen Keohane - 2002 - Страниц: 313
...institution of sovereignty. Internationally, formal sovereignty can be defined, as Hans J. Morgenthau did. as ''the supreme legal authority of the nation to give...other nation and equality with it under international law."27 This doctrine is traditionally seen as an outcome of the Peace of Westphalia, although Stephen... | |
| Ulrich Teusch - 2003 - Страниц: 332
...eingeschränkt, das einige wenige, aber wichtige Dinge regelt. So definiert Morgenthau: „Sovereignty is the supreme legal authority of the nation to give...and equality with it under international law.'""' Daniel Philpott lehnt sich in seiner Definition beinahe wörtlich an Morgenthau an, wenn er unter Souveränität... | |
| Laurent Goetschel, Magdalena Bernath, Daniel Schwarz - 2004 - Страниц: 232
...states.'0 Morgenthau defines sovereignty as 'the supreme legal authority of the nation to give and enforce law within a certain territory and, in consequence,...nation and equality with it under international law'" (emphasis by the authors). Sovereignty should be understood as supremacy achieved by the definition... | |
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