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The Future of India. Part III of the Report on the Constitutional Problem in India submitted to the Warden and Fellows of Nuffield College, Oxford. By R. Coupland, C.I.E., M.A., Hony. D.Litt. (Durham), Fellow of All Souls and Nuffield College, Beit Professor of Colonial History in the University of Oxford. 8/1/2>” x 5/1/2>”. Pp. 207. 6 Maps. Oxford University Press. Price 6s. 6d. Allenby in Egypt. Being Volume II of Allenby: A Study in Greatness. By Field‐Marshal Viscount Wavell of Cyrenaica and Winchester, G.C.B., C.M.G., M.C., Viceroy of India, Ios. 6d. Generals and Geographers : the Twilight of Geopolitics. By Hans W. Weigert. Pp. 259. Oxford University Press (New York). $3.00. Judæa Lives Again. By Norman Bentwich. Pp. 189. Gollancz. 8s. 6d. Desert. Journey. By George Rodgers. Pp. 151. 44 photographs. Cresset Press. 15s. Jordan's Tunis Diary. By Philip Jordan. Pp. 256. London: Collins. 1943. 10s. 6d. Persia in the Early Days of the Pahlavi Régime. By D. Bourke‐Borrowes. Return to Happiness. By Jonas Lied. Pp. xi+217. 8/3/4>” x 6”. Macmillan. 18s. Jenghiz Khan. By Squadron‐Leader C. C. Walker. 10” x 6/1/2>”. Pp.216. 7 Maps. Published by Luzac, London. 1940. 17s. 6d. Tibetan Sentences. By Sir Basil Gould and H. E. Richardson. India Today and Tomorrow. By Sir Geoffrey de Montmorency. Signpost Booklet. Price 6d. The Burmese Scene. By Maurice Collis. 7” x 5”. Pp. 60. John Crowther. 5s. Government by Assassination. By Hugh Byas. George Allen and Unwin. 10s. 6d. Survey of the Anglo‐Egyptian Sudan, 1898–1941. By K. D. D. Henderson. Kassala at War. By B. Kennedy‐Cooke. Advisory council for the Northern Sudan: a broadcast 相似文献
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Doris Buss 《Feminist Legal Studies》2002,10(1):91-99
The Yugoslav war crimes tribunal convictedthree men for their role in the mass rape ofMuslim women during the conflict inBosnia-Hercegovina. That decision is a landmarkin many respects, but primarily for itsdetermination that the rape of Muslim womenamounted to a crime against humanity. Thiscomment provides an overview of the decision,exploring the significance of recognising rapeas a crime against humanity within the contextof other developments in the area of wartimerape and sexual violence. The comment alsoprovides a brief review of the decision inlight of the author's previous scepticism aboutthe capacity for the Tribunal meaningfully toaddress violence against women. The commentconcludes that while many aspects of thedecision are promising, the war crimes trialitself may offer a limiting arena within whichto address wartime rape. 相似文献
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Emily Buss 《Family Court Review》2010,48(2):262-276
States wishing to extend foster care supports to young adults under the Fostering Connections to Success Act are required to meet all the requirements of Title IV‐E, which include regular reviews that have traditionally been conducted in juvenile courts. For some, this requirement of ongoing judicial involvement is a reason to forgo this significant source of new federal dollars. Others are seeking ways to minimize ongoing court involvement while still complying with federal requirements. This article argues that these views are misguided. Designed properly, juvenile court reviews can play a unique and important role in helping young adults begin to take responsibility for their own futures. 相似文献
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Doris E. Buss 《Feminist Legal Studies》2009,17(2):145-163
One of the most significant shifts in current thinking on war and gender is the recognition that rape in wartime is not a
simple by-product of war, but often a planned and targeted policy. For many feminists ‘rape as a weapon of war’ provides a
way to articulate the systematic, pervasive, and orchestrated nature of wartime sexual violence that marks it as integral
rather than incidental to war. This recognition of rape as a weapon of war has taken on legal significance at the Rwandan
and Yugoslav Tribunals where rape has been prosecuted as a crime against humanity and genocide. In this paper, I examine how
the Rwanda Tribunal’s record of judgments conceives of rape enacted as an instrument of the genocide. I consider in particular
how the Tribunal’s conception of ‘rape as a weapon of war’ shapes what can be known about sexual violence and gender in the
Rwandan genocide and what cannot, the categories of victims legally recognised and those that are not, and the questions pursued,
and those foreclosed, about the patterns of violence before and during the genocide.
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Doris E. BussEmail: |
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