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The Jordan River disputeJanuary 1966 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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The Latin American group in a changing United Nations, 1955-1965January 1971 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Nationalism and confrontation in the Southeast Asian islands: the sources of Indonesian foreign policyJanuary 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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The neorealist paradigm and armament behavior: Structural influences on the armament behavior of the northeast Asian states during bipolarityJanuary 1996 (has links)
This study both extends neorealist research on the role of structure and explores the limitations of the neorealist paradigm by applying its concepts and theories to armament behavior. As first advanced by Kenneth N. Waltz, neorealism has argued that structure both creates and constrains opportunities open to the constituents of the international system. Problematic in the argument is the claim for the primacy of structure in explaining international phenomena like arming behavior We apply the basic logic inherent in the neorealist argument to a particular form of structure, namely bipolarity, to see how its structural characteristics influence armament behavior of states. The upshot of theoretical research is a structuralist theory of armament under bipolarity, which intends to explain different characteristic patterns of armament behavior among poles, non-pole, and neutral members. We put structural hypotheses derived from the theory to a test against empirical reality, the armament history of the Northeast Asian states Our findings demonstrate the importance of structure as a necessary ingredient for explaining armament behavior--it shapes and drives, and therefore conditions, armament behavior of states in Northeast Asia--but without reckoning with the unit-level theories that correspond to structural theories, an explanation cannot be causally complete. We expose methodological shortcomings which cannot be easily remedied / acase@tulane.edu
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The North American Free Trade Agreement and the Mexican system of products liability: Harmonization and reform of Mexican tort lawJanuary 2008 (has links)
The increased trade and contact among nationals of Canada, Mexico, and the United States since NAFTA was enacted requires greater uniformity in the laws of each country. Products liability legislation in the three countries is no exception. While each country's laws do address civil liability for product defects, they approach this regulation in different ways. Mexico's laws in this area lag far behind those of the United States and Canada in offering consumer protection. As a result, Canadian and U.S. manufacturers and distributors face much less of a risk of liability when they introduce inferior products into the Mexican market than Mexican manufacturers and distributors encounter in the Canadian and U.S. markets. Mexico's producer-friendly laws encourage manufacturers in all three countries to produce poor-quality products for the Mexican consumer Another problem that emerges from this lack of integration of the three countries' products liability laws is the ability of Mexican manufacturer's to escape liability under judgments issued against them in the United States and Canada. Through the use of the 'Amparo' in Mexico, Mexican manufacturers can prevent Mexican courts from enforcing these foreign judgments. 'Amparo' is a constitutional instrument that protects the guaranties of freedom, equality, property, and security. A party that is held liable for a product defect may use this legal instrument by arguing that the execution of a judgment against it goes against the public order and therefore affects its constitutional guarantees. The amparo typically would be used when a foreign court requires a Mexican manufacturer to pay punitive damages. The concept of punitive damages is not contemplated in Mexican law; therefore, the manufacturer could show that enforcing the judgment would violate its constitutional rights This Dissertation argues for the improvement of Mexican products liability laws to bring these laws more in line with those of the other NAFTA countries. These proposed improvements to Mexican law are based on a study of the products liability laws in place in the civil law system (Continental Law) of Spain. This Dissertation also proposes certain legal reforms that need to be made within the Mexican legal system so that products liability judgments dictated in the United States and Canada may be executed with the assistance of Mexican courts, without violating the constitutional guarantees of the affected parties. This Dissertation is addressed to readers who are familiar with the legal system for products liability in the United States. Therefore, while an overview of Mexico's and Canada's laws in this area will be presented, this Dissertation does not include an overview of the corresponding U.S. laws / acase@tulane.edu
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Peru: the Latin American sub-system and the United States, 1963-1974January 1977 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Peru's foreign policy: ends and means, 1945-1968January 1969 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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The politics of economic integration in the Andean Common MarketJanuary 1975 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Political communication: a case study of United States propaganda in North Korea and South KoreaJanuary 1971 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Priority patterns in the application of international law and municipal law norms in the courts of the Federal Republic of Germany and the United StatesJanuary 1977 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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