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Conflicting Orders and the Appraisal of Resort to Coercion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2017

Florentino P. Feliciano*
Affiliation:
Department of Justice, Republic of the Philippines

Abstract

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Type
Third Session
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1959

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References

1 Extended development, and documentation, of the principal points somewhat cryptically outlined in this brief paper may be found in KcDougal and Feliciano, “Legal Regulation of Eesort to International Coercion: Aggression and Self-Defense in Policy Perspective,” 68 Yale Law Journal 1057 (1959).

2 Jenks, The Common Law of Mankind 139–143 (1958).

3 Art. 2(4).

4 Art. 1(1) and Art. 39.

5 Quoted in Soloveitchik, “International Law as ‘Instrument of Politics,’” 21 U. of Kansas City Law Eev. 169, 177 (1958).

6 Goodrich, The United Nations 327 (1959).

7 Hitler, Mein Kampf 949 (Annotated English ed., Eeynal and Hitchcock Co., 1939).

8 See, e.g., Strausz-Hupé and others, Protracted Conflict (1959), and Leites, A Study of Bolshevism (1953).

9 2 Wright, A Study of War 833–848 (1942).

10 An excellent recent study is George, Propaganda Analysis (1959). See also Berelson, Content Analysis in Communications Research (1952).