The second edition of the Commentary has been fully updated to reflect the latest legal developments since 2019. It provides an article-by-article summary of the EU Treaties and the Charter of Fundamental Rights and offers a quick reference to the provisions of the treaties, how they are interpreted and applied in practice.
The second edition of the Commentary has been fully updated to reflect the latest legal developments since 2019. It provides an article-by-article summary of the EU Treaties and the Charter of Fundamental Rights and offers a quick reference to the provisions of the treaties, how they are interpreted and applied in practice.
Long before the British Empire came into existence, was there an English Empire? In this compelling study, R. R. Davies examines England's medieval conquest and colonization of the outer zones of the British Isles. He shows how the increasingly vexed question of the future of the United Kingdom has its roots in the Middle Ages, when Edward I set out to subjugate his Celtic neighbours.
A practical and succinct guide designed to help you give your manuscript its best chance to be noticed by literary agents. Contains a systematic chapter-by-chapter look at the symptoms of bad writing and how to avoid them. Written in an engaging and friendly style by a successful literary agent with a knowledgeable insider's perspective.
Bringing together conceptual theories of international investment law with the practical application of the law in treaty arbitration, this book investigates the key controversies in the field. It provides a detailed examination of how a different theoretical approach would have led to a different outcome in a number of important arbitral awards.
In The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy, the eminent authority on American foreign policy Michael Mandelbaum offers a new framework for understanding the history of the foreign policy of the United States. He divides that history into four distinct periods, each of them defined by the consistent increase in the power the country has had at its disposal in its relations with other countries.