Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law

Search

Your search for 'tei_propername:"Droit international"' returned 3 results. Modify search

Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first

Francisco Suarez (1548-1617) (Les théologiens espagnols du XVIe siècle et l’école moderne du droit international) (Volume 43)

(55,639 words)

Author(s): Barcia Trelles, Camilo
Barcia Trelles, Camilo Keywords: Francisco Suárez (1548-1617) | International law | Documents | Mots clefs: Suarez (F.) | Droit international | Documents | ABSTRACT Camilo Barcia Trelles begins his course on the contribution of Francisco Suarez to the Modern School of International law with a general presentation of Suarez and international law. He then studies the vision of the law of nations which Suarez had. He also focuses on the position of Suarez on war, particularly within the framework of the notion of just war…

Francisco de Vitoria et l’école moderne du droit international (Volume 17)

(84,254 words)

Author(s): Barcia Trelles, Camilo
Barcia Trelles, Camilo Keywords: Francisco de Vitoria (1492-1546) | International law | Doctrines | Mots clefs: Vitoria (F. de) | Droit international | Doctrines | ABSTRACT Camilo Barcia Trelles explains in the introduction of his course that it takes the coincidence of two factors for Vitoria to be able to bequeath to posterity its "immortal doctrines": the appearance of new problems arising from recent realities (discovery and conquest of America), and the existence of an objective and a cultivated spirit ready to addr…

Fernando Vazquez de Menchaca (1512-1569) L’école espagnole du droit international du XVIe siècle (Volume 67)

(35,749 words)

Author(s): Barcia Trelles, Camilo
Barcia Trelles, Camilo Keywords: Spain | International law | Doctrines | Legal history | Fernando Vazquez de Menchaca (1512-1569) | Mots clefs: Espagne | Droit international | Doctrines | Histoire du droit | ABSTRACT In his course, Camillo Barcia Trelles intends to study the international ideas of Fernando Vasquez de Menchaca, regarding which writes the author, there is a curious contradiction, in the sense that he was once most famous by his name and most neglected in his substance. After a presentation of the life and work of …