Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Institute Of International Law

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-92 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Institute Of International Law:     more books (100)
  1. Institutes of International Law by Daniel Gardner, 2009-12-18
  2. Institutes of International Law, Volume 1 by Richard Wildman, 2010-02-09
  3. The American Institute of International Law: its declaration of the rights and duties of nations by James Brown Scott, 2010-09-04
  4. Institutes of international law, public and private, as settled by the Supreme court of the United States, and by our republic. With references to judicial decisions by Daniel Gardner, 2010-07-28
  5. The American Institute of International Law: Its Declaration... by James B. Scott, 1916-01-01
  6. Institutes of International Law, Public and Private, as Settled by the Supreme Court of the United States, and by Our Republic. With References by Daniel Gardner, 2010-01-03
  7. THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF HABANA CONCERNING INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION ADOPTED BY THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
  8. Institutes of International Law, Public and Private, As Settled by the Sup Reme Court of the United States, and by Our Republic by Daniel Gardner, 1995-05
  9. Resolutions of the Institute of International Law by James Brown Scott, 2009-10-05
  10. Resolutions Of The Institute Of International Law Dealing With The Law Of Nations: With A Historical Introduction And Explanatory Notes (1916)
  11. Exchange Rate Risks in International Contracts (Dossiers of the Inst of Intl Bus Law & Practice) by Icc's Institute of International Law & P, 1987-06
  12. Role And Future Of The European Court Of Justice (European Law Series)
  13. Annuaire De L'institut De Droit International, Volume 14 (French Edition)
  14. Tableau Décennal De L'Organisation, Du Personnel Et Des Travaux De L'Institut De Droit International (Période 1894-1904) (French Edition)

81. Centennial Symposium Programme
Service Council/The American Friends Service Committee, institute of InternationalLaw. Saturday, December 8. Session 9, The world and the nobel Peace Prize in
http://www.nobel.no/eng_jub_symp.html

Home

Site Map

Committee
Committee and members
Nomination process

Alfred Nobel and his will
Laureates
Speeches and Lectures
List of Laureates
Institute
History and mission
Fellowship-
program Library ... Staff Nobel Peace Prize Centennial Symposium The Conflicts of the 20th century and the Solutions for the 21st century Holmenkollen Park Hotell, Oslo December 6-8, 2001 Thursday, December 6 Opening of the 2001 Nobel Symposium: Gunnar Berge, Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee Session 1 War and Peace in the 20th Century: The Over-all Balance S: Eric Hobsbawn L: Mikhail Gorbachev C: International Committee of the Red Cross, Máiread Maguire Session 2 Totalitarianism and ideological conflict - Help spreading democracy and human rights S: Michael Doyle L: Amnesty International C: Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Médecins sans frontières

82. The Fridtjof Nansen Institute Website
law and Policy for Pollution Prevention Scheme Securing environmental benefits frominternational emissions trading The Fridtjof Nansen institute is located at
http://www.fni.no/
Search this site
The Fridtjof Nansen Institute is an independent foundation engaged in research on international environmental, energy, and resource management politics. The Institute seeks to maintain an multi-disciplinary approach, with main emphasis on political science, economics, and international law. It collaborates extensively with other institutions, in Norway and abroad. In addition to its research activities, the Fridtjof Nansen Institute (FNI) publishes the Yearbook of International Cooperation on Environment and Development
Recently published books by FNI authors (more books here

Russia and the West - Environmental co-operation and conflict
Routledge, 2003. 184 p.
Implementing international environmental agreements in Russia
Manchester University Press, 2003. 176 p.
Clearing the Air - European advances in tackling acid rain and atmospheric pollution
Ashgate, 2002. 202 p.
Environmental Regime Effectiveness: Confronting Theory with Evidence
. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001. 491 p.

83. Welcome To Pace Law School
200 articles published in law journals in president of the prestigious internationalInstitute of Higher a worldwide, scholarly international criminal justice
http://www.law.pace.edu/News/sloan00.html
You are here: Home News and Events
Events Calendar

Lecture Series
...
Webcast Events

M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI, RENOWNED INTERNATIONAL
CRIMINAL LAW SCHOLAR TO SPEAK AT PACE LAW SCHOOL, MARCH 23,
WHAT
: M. Cherif Bassiouni, world-renowned expert in international criminal law, will deliver the annual Sloan Lecture on International Law at Pace Law School. Bassiouni was a nominee for the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize based on his contribution to the establishment of the International Criminal Court. WHO: The lecture is open to the general public and will be of particular interest to persons interested in international relations, international human rights, the work of the United Nations, and international law in general. There will be a reception with the speaker following the Lecture. The Lecture and reception are free and open to the public. WHEN: 7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 23, 2000 WHERE: Pace Law School, 78 North Broadway, White Plains, New York. The Lecture will be held in the Moot Court Room of the Gerber Glass Building. TO REGISTER: To register, or for information, contact Alta Levat (914) 422-4128.

84. Biography Of Walter F. Mondale:
Portrait, and essay on the Senator, Vice President, and Ambassador to Japan.Category Society History Mondale, Walter Frederick...... a Distinguished University Fellow in law and Public of the National Democratic Institutefor international that conducts nonpartisan international programs to
http://www.mnc.net/norway/Mondale.htm
Biography of
Walter Frederick ("Fritz") Mondale was born in Ceylon, Minnesota on Jan. 5, 1928, the son of Theodore Sigvaard Mondale and Claribel Cowan Mondale. He spent his boyhood in the small towns of southern Minnesota, where he attended public schools. After he helped manage Hubert H. Humphrey's first successful U.S. Senate campaign in 1948, he earned his B.A. in political science from the University of Minnesota in 1951. After completing service as a corporal in the U.S. Army, Mondale received his LL.B (cum laude) from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1956, having served on the law review and as a law clerk in the Minnesota Supreme Court. Mondale practiced law for the next four years in Minneapolis. In 1960, Minnesota Gov. Orville Freeman appointed him to the position of state attorney general. Mondale was then elected to the office in 1962, and served until 1964, when Gov. Karl Rolvaag asked him to fill the U.S. Senate vacancy create by Hubert Humphrey's election to the vice presidency. The voters of Minnesota returned Mondale to the Senate in 1966 and 1972. During his 12 years as a senator, Mondale served on the Finance Committee, the Labor and Public Welfare Committee, Budget Committee, and the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee. He also served as the chairman of the Select Committee on Equal Education Opportunity and as the chairman of the Intelligence Committee's Domestic Task Force.

85. Record Article
The institute's next major conference will be Nov. Lee Epstein, Ph.D., professor oflaw and the Among the international array of distinguished participants are
http://record.wustl.edu/archive/2000/11-10-00/articles/international.html
International studies center opens with major conference
By Ann Nicholson The School of Law is launching a new Institute for Global Legal Studies that will foster groundbreaking educational and research initiatives on a broad range of international issues. The institute officially will kick off Nov. 17-18 with an inaugural colloquium titled "The United Nations and the Protection of Human Rights" The institute's director is Stephen H. Legomsky, J.D., D. Phil., the Charles F. Nagel Professor of International and Comparative Law and a renowned scholar in immigration, refugee and citizenship law and policy. "Today, people, goods, services, information and capital all flow freely across international boundaries," Legomsky said. "From the Internet, e-mail and fax machines, to travel, migration, commerce and foreign relations, the story of the new millennium will be our ever-shrinking planet. The world's problems and the problems entrusted to lawyers will increasingly require international cooperation and international solutions." Joel Seligman, J.D., law school dean and the Ethan A. H. Shepley University Professor, said the new institute builds on the school's existing international programs. "The study of international, foreign and comparative law is a critical ingredient of a well-rounded legal education and a core element of legal and interdisciplinary scholarship," he said. "The institute will synthesize and advance the profound international strengths of both the University and the law school as it tackles leading international and comparative law issues."

86. International Criminal Law And Human Rights Scholar M. Cherif Bassiouni To Speak
200 articles published in law journals in president of the prestigious internationalInstitute of Higher a worldwide scholarly international criminal justice
http://appserv.pace.edu/newsboard/wwwboard/2000/messages/37.html
International Criminal Law and Human Rights Scholar M. Cherif Bassiouni to Speak at Pace Law School, March 23
Posted by Public Affairs on March 21, 19100 at 18:39:06: Contact: Public Affairs
Contact: Alta Levat
WHAT: M. Cherif Bassiouni, world-renowned expert in international criminal law, will deliver the annual Sloan Lecture on International Law at Pace Law School. Bassiouni was a nominee for the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize based on his contribution to the establishment of the International Criminal Court. WHO: The lecture is open to the general public and will be of particular interest to persons interested in international relations, international human rights, the work of the United Nations, and international law in general. There will be a reception with the speaker following the lecture. The lecture and reception are free and open to the public. WHEN: 7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 23, 2000 WHERE: Pace Law School, 78 North Broadway, White Plains, N.Y. The lecture will be held in the Moot Court Room, Gerber Glass Building. To register, or for information, contact Alta Levat (914) 422-4128.

87. Advisory Board
Director, institute for the Care of Victims of Founder and former CoPresident, InternationalPhysicians for the Gale Professor of law and Professor of Medicine
http://www.glphr.org/advisory.htm
Working Together for Human Rights home search contact GLP News ... Caring for Refugees and Survivors of Torture A dvisory B oard David Allen, M.D. (Bahamas) M. Cherif Bassiouni, J.D. (USA) Professor of Law and President of the International Human Rights Law Institute at Depaul University College of Law; President, International Institute of Higher Studies in Criminal Services; Vice-Chairman of the General Assembly's Preparatory Committee on the Establishment of an International Criminal Court, Chairman of the United Nations Committee of Experts Established Pursuant to security Council 780 to Investigate Violations of International Humanitarian Law in the Former Yugoslavia; author and editor of 37 books on U.S. Criminal Law, International and Comparative Law and Human Rights. Solomon Benatar, M.D. (South Africa) Solomon R Benatar is Professor of Medicine at the University of Cape Town and Director of the UCT Bioethics Center. He is currently President of the International Association of Bioethics, Chairman of the South African National Research Ethics Committee and Visiting Professor in Public Health Sciences and Medicine at the University of Toronto. His research interests include international research ethics, international heath and Global HealthEthics. He is an ethics consultant to to Medecins Sans Frontieres (Holland) and to the HIV Prevention Trials Network (USA). He is an elected Foreign Member of the US National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

88. Peace Prize Forum Speaker Bios: Walter Mondale
was a Distinguished University Fellow in law and Public Policy Forum at the HumphreyInstitute to bring for conferences on domestic and international issues.
http://www.cord.edu/dept/news/events/ppf/mondale.html
Walter F. Mondale
Mondale served as Ambassador to Japan from August 13, 1993, to December 15, 1996. During that period, he helped to negotiate several U.S.-Japan security agreements, including a resolution to the controversy about the U.S. military presence in Okinawa. He also helped to negotiate numerous trade agreements between the United States and Japan, and he promoted the expansion of educational exchanges between the two nations. In addition, Mondale attended the annual APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation) summit meetings in Seattle, Jakarta, Osaka, and Manila.
Since returning from Japan, Mondale has become a director of several non-profit and corporate boards. The non-profit boards include the Japan Society, Minnesota Public Radio and University of Minnesota Foundation. His corporate board memberships include the BlackRock Funds, Northwest Airlines, and UnitedHealth Group.
In 1997 and 1998, Mondale served as co-chair (with former Republican Senator Nancy Kassebaum Baker) of the independent, bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Project. This national project was supported by the Pew Charitable Trusts and staffed by The Aspen Institute in Washington, DC.
Prior to his appointment as U.S. Ambassador to Japan, Walter Mondale was a Distinguished University Fellow in Law and Public Affairs at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota. In 1990, he established the Mondale Policy Forum at the Humphrey Institute to bring together leading scholars and policymakers for conferences on domestic and international issues.

89. STATEMENT OF THE MEIKLEJOHN CIVIL LIBERTIES INSTITUTE
and use of existing human rights and peace law at the local, national, and internationallevels The institute's first goal is to help individuals use human
http://www.sfsu.edu/~mclicfc/statement.html
STATEMENT OF THE MEIKLEJOHN CIVIL LIBERTIES INSTITUTE (MCLI) [November 2, 2001]
The Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute is an organization dedicated to publicizing and using the fundamental principles of the U.S. Constitution, the United Nations Charter and other human rights treaties. We join everyone in mourning the lives that were lost on Sept. 11 and sympathize with the survivors. We urge the US Government to comply with international law and to make use of the wisdom embodied in the law. There can be no justification for terrorism. Yet the root causes of this terrorism lie deep in the unresolved political issues of the last century, issues of basic justice and human rights that cannot be settled by military force. Thus the bombing of Afghanistan, and the use of ground troops, can do little or nothing toward ending terrorism and is more likely to increase it. It violates international law and to date has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of innocent civilians, including Afghan national employees of the UN removing land mines, and the destruction of marked Red Cross/Red Crescent food warehouses, adding a further tragedy to those of New York and Washington, D.C. The only organization in place that can work effectively for the peaceful resolution of the deep political/economic issues that lie behind the use of terrorism in the United States and elsewhere is the United Nations, the organization our country helped to create for that purpose. It must be allowed to carry out this purpose.

90. Zoryan Institute
Israel Charny, Director, institute of the Distinguised Professor of InternationalLaw, Rutgers University. States Holocaust Memorial Council; nobel Laureate for
http://www.zoryaninstitute.org/Table_Of_Contents/genocide_docs_126_scholars.htm
126 HOLOCAUST SCHOLARS AFFIRM THE INCONTESTABLE FACT OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND URGE WESTERN DEMOCRACIES TO OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZE IT At the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches, convening at St. Joseph University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March 3-7, 2000, one hundred twenty-six Holocaust scholars, holders of Academic Chairs and Directors of Holocaust Research and Studies Centers, participants in the conference, signed a statement affirming that the World War I Armenian Genocide is an incontestable historical fact and accordingly urge the governments of Western Democracies to recognize it as such. The petitioners, among whom is Nobel Laureate for Peace Elie Wiesel, who was the keynote speaker at the conference, also asked the Western Democracies to urge the Government and Parliament of Turkey to finally come to terms with a dark chapter of Ottoman-Turkish history and to recognize the Armenian Genocide. This would provide an invaluable impetus to the process of the democratization of Turkey. Below is a partial list of the signatories:
Prof. Yehuda Bauer

91. No Peace Without Justice
Italy's judiciary and putting himself above the law. . The making of the InternationalCriminal Court Archive Union and the Open Society institute Open Society
http://www.npwj.org/modules.php?name=News&new_topic=6

92. SWEDEN.SE - The Official Gateway To Sweden - Links
Wallenberginstitutet The Raoul Wallenberg institute of Human Rights and HumanitarianLaw is an Stockholm international Forum The Swedish Prime Minister
http://www.sweden.se/templates/Links____1993.asp?cats=84,119,196

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-92 of 92    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter