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War, Peace and International Order?
註釋Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of contributors -- Introduction: Unbridled promise? The Hague's peaceconferences and their legacies -- Notes -- Chapter 1 Justifying international action: International law, The Hague anddiplomacy before 1914 -- Notes -- Chapter 2 Peace through law: The Hague Peace Conferences and the rise of the ius contra bellum -- The 'peace through law' movement, arbitration and the ius ad bellum tradition -- The 1899 Hague Peace Conference -- The 1907 Hague Peace Conference -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Muddied waters: The influence of the first Hagueconference on the evolution of the Geneva Conventions of 1864 and 1906 -- The maritime convention -- Revising the Geneva Convention -- The Hague Conference, 1899 -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Chapter 4 Reconsidering disarmament at the Hague Peace Conference of 1899, and after -- Notes -- Chapter 5 More than just a taboo: The legacy of the chemical warfareprohibitions of the 1899 and 1907Hague Conferences -- Defining poison gas -- Outlawing chemical warfare at The Hague -- The First World War -- The interwar period and the Second World War -- Post-war and beyond -- Notes -- Chapter 6 Sub silentio: The sexual assault of womenin international law -- The distinction between humans and persons in international law -- Final thoughts: attention and the letter of the law -- Notes -- Chapter 7 The duel of honour and the origins of the rules for arms, warfare and arbitration in the Hague conferences -- The development of duelling jurisprudence from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries -- Duelling protocols, honour and the internationalisation of honour at The Hague -- Notes -- Chapter 8 Writing for peace: Reconsidering the British public peacepetitioning movement's historical legaciesafter 1898 -- Notes