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The survival of the Warsaw system and the new Montreal convention governing certain rules for international carriage by air : are the conflicts solved?González, Jeanny Romero January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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The Montreal Convention of 1999 : a "well-worn" restructuring of liability and jurisdictionSerrao, Jacqueline Etil. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The concepts of "accident" and "bodily injury" in private international air lawLee, Jae Woon, 1979- January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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A Study Of Factors Contributing To Self-reported Anomalies In Civil AviationAndrzejczak, Chris 01 January 2010 (has links)
A study investigating what factors are present leading to pilots submitting voluntary anomaly reports regarding their flight performance was conducted. The study employed statistical methods, text mining, clustering, and dimensional reduction techniques in an effort to determine relationships between factors and anomalies. A review of the literature was conducted to determine what factors are contributing to these anomalous incidents, as well as what research exists on human error, its causes, and its management. Data from the NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) was analyzed using traditional statistical methods such as frequencies and multinomial logistic regression. Recently formalized approaches in text mining such as Knowledge Based Discovery (KBD) and Literature Based Discovery (LBD) were employed to create associations between factors and anomalies. These methods were also used to generate predictive models. Finally, advances in dimensional reduction techniques identified concepts or keywords within records, thus creating a framework for an unsupervised document classification system. Findings from this study reinforced established views on contributing factors to civil aviation anomalies. New associations between previously unrelated factors and conditions were also found. Dimensionality reduction also demonstrated the possibility of identifying salient factors from unstructured text records, and was able to classify these records using these identified features.
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Air carrier’s liability in AustraliaBradley, Martin A. January 1962 (has links)
Note:
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Air carrier liability : unfinished unification of private international air lawAlhoudail, Mamdouh Ali January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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The Montreal convention of 1999 : problems and prospectsAmana, Idorenyin Edet January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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La mise en cause de la responsabilité illimitée du transporteur aérienAberkane, Abès January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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The Warsaw System : a case for Thailand to ratify the Montreal Convention 1999 or notYodmani, Suvongse January 2003 (has links)
The Warsaw Convention 1929 is the first international instrument relating to private international air law. It established a certain uniform set of regulations in the field of international carriage by air. This widely accepted Convention was later amended and supplemented by several instruments in order to adjust and adapt this uniform set of rules to the rapid growth of aviation industry. With the absence of consolidation, the result was total confusion created by the coexistence of multiple legal regimes of the Warsaw System. To modernize and consolidate the instruments of the Warsaw System into one single instrument, the Montreal Convention was adopted on May 28, 1999. / The first two chapters of this thesis explore the Warsaw System and the Montreal Convention. The merits and demerits of the instruments are discussed as well as the future of the Montreal Convention 1999. / In the last chapter, the related legal regimes of Thailand are introduced. A comparative study of the Thai laws and the international Conventions are carried out, with a view to determine the advantages and disadvantages for Thailand of becoming a party to the Conventions governing the international carriage by air. / The conclusion is a call for Thailand to ratify the Montreal Convention 1999 which will soon come into force, as soon as possible.
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Uniformity has its limits : article 3 of the Warsaw convention as in comparative United States and Canadian law. / Warsaw's article 3 in comparative U.S. and Canadian law.Travis, Samuel J. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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