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Jus Gentium: Journal of International Legal History published the second issue of its second volume, on the centenary of the Russian Revolution.
Table of contents:
Articles
- G.S. Starodubtsev, The 1917 October Russian Revolution and International Law
- V.G. Butkevych, The International-Legal Ideology of Pre-Slavic Chiefdoms of the Ukrainian Ethnos (Part Three)
- O.O. Merezhko, On the Origins of the Ukrainian Science of International Law
- Olga Butkevych, The Nezabytovskyĭ Concept of the Law of International Community
- A. N. Vylegzhanin, Legal Status of the Bering Strait: Historical and Legal Context
- W.E. Butler & V.S. Ivanenko, On the History of Teaching International Law at St. Petersburg University
Notes and Comments
- Eglė Bendikaitė, Interwar Lithuania as a Laboratory of International Law
- W.E. Butler, Vladimir Grabar, Peter Lombard, John Mair, and the History of International Law
International Legal Doctrine
- W.E. Butler, The Charles Cramer Archive: A Russian Consul in America and Europe
- W.E. Butler, Biographical Note: On the Life and Work of Tikhon Fedorovich Stepanov
- T.F. Stepanov, All-People’s Law in Aggregate with Diplomacy
(source: International Law Reporter)
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