01131nam0 22003011i 450 UON0052113120231221023052.12201-950336-4-701-950358-4-4pbk.20231216g19841985 |0itac50 baengUS|||| |||||Words and valuessome leading words and where they lead usPeggy RosenthalNew YorkOxfordOxford University press©1984stampa 1985XIX, 295 p.22 cmLinguaggio e pensieroUONC040116FIGBOxfordUONL000029USNew YorkUONL000050401.9Psicolinguistica21ROSENTHALPeggyUONV2937141503764Oxford University PressUONV245947650ITSOL20250606RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00521131SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI F. Signore3 L 1597 SI 48545 5 Words and values3905686UNIOR03625nam 2200409z- 450 9910587599403321202202253-7489-1321-4978-3-8487-7307-7paper978-3-7489-1321-4ebook(CKB)5680000000018310(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/78874(oapen)doab78874(EXLCZ)99568000000001831020202202d2022 |y eengurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRussian Contributions to International Humanitarian LawA contrastive analysis of Russia's historical role and its current practiceBaden-BadenNomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG2022Baden-Baden :Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft2022.1 online resource (447 p.)Kölner Schriften zum Friedenssicherungsrecht - Cologne Studies on International Peace and Security Law - Études colonaises sur le droit de la paix et de la sécurité internationaleBand 163-8487-7307-4 Has Russia turned from "Paul to Saul" with regards to international humanitarian law (IHL)? This book aims to answer this question by contrasting the past and the present. Firstly, it offers a comprehensive account of the remarkable Russian contributions to IHL since 1850. Secondly, it analyses Russia's current approach to IHL, drawing on a wide range of legislation, case law, diplomatic records, and military practice. Finally, the author contrasts the past and the present - not without embedding his findings in the changed context of our time. The book is aimed at international law experts as well as people interested in legal history. Its author is an IHL researcher and practitioner with extensive experience in the post-soviet world.Has Russia turned from "Paul to Saul" with regards to international humanitarian law (IHL)? This book aims to answer this question by contrasting the past and the present. Firstly, it offers a comprehensive account of the remarkable Russian contributions to IHL since 1850. Secondly, it analyses Russia's current approach to IHL, drawing on a wide range of legislation, case law, diplomatic records, and military practice. Finally, the author contrasts the past and the present - not without embedding his findings in the changed context of our time. The book is aimed at international law experts as well as people interested in legal history. Its author is an IHL researcher and practitioner with extensive experience in the post-soviet world.Russian Contributions to International Humanitarian LawLBBbicsscFriedenssicherung, Humanitäres Völkerrecht, Menschenrechte, Russland, StIGH, Vereinte Nationen, Russia, Zar, Czar, Tsar, Sowjetunion, Soviet Union, UdSSR, USSR, humanitäres Völkerrecht, international humanitarian law, hVr, IHL , Krieg, war, Recht der bewaffneten Konflikte, law of armed conflict, Kriegsrecht, laws of war, Haager Konvention, Hague Convention, Petersburger Erklärung, St Petersburg Declaration, Friedrich Martens, Fyodor Martens, Syrien, Syria, Ostukraine, Eastern Ukraine, Tschetschenien, Chechnya, Wagner Group, Kosaken, CossacksLBBRiepl Michael1254963BOOK9910587599403321Russian Contributions to International Humanitarian Law2909641UNINA