Fiction Goes to Court: Favorite Stories of Lawyers and the Law Selected by Famous LawyersAlbert P. Blaustein Approaches to the problem of biological warfare have been dominated by a western (and predominately American) discourse that is having the effect of polarizing western and non-western states, rendering a cooperative international solution to problems of security all but impossible, argues Wright (history of science, U. of Michigan). She seeks to counter this trend by introducing marginalized non-western perspectives in this collection of 17 essays. Contributors from the fields of international law, history, information science, medicine, diplomacy, and the military first examine the problem of biological warfare in the dominant contexts that have been expressed since the adoption of the Biological Weapons Convention. The heart of the book is devoted to addressing the political origins and purposes of the international instruments developed to address biological warfare, with perspectives coming from the experiences of Iraq, China, and India. |
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Page 47
... knew it was a dangerous weapon if you assert that he did it willfully . You don't have to allege in an indictment charging an assault with a pistol that the defendant knew it was loaded . " " But a dog is different ! " reasoned Mr. Tutt ...
... knew it was a dangerous weapon if you assert that he did it willfully . You don't have to allege in an indictment charging an assault with a pistol that the defendant knew it was loaded . " " But a dog is different ! " reasoned Mr. Tutt ...
Page 261
... knew that once you bested anybody like Mr. Scratch in fair fight , his power on you was gone . And he could see that Mr. Scratch knew it too . The stranger twisted and wriggled , but he couldn't get out of that grip . " Come , come , Mr ...
... knew that once you bested anybody like Mr. Scratch in fair fight , his power on you was gone . And he could see that Mr. Scratch knew it too . The stranger twisted and wriggled , but he couldn't get out of that grip . " Come , come , Mr ...
Page 303
... knew how to circumvent it . He employed a watchman he knew was addicted to drink . He only needed to stage his coup at the right time . He fired Corbin and paid him off with bills that had been recorded by the bank on page eight of the ...
... knew how to circumvent it . He employed a watchman he knew was addicted to drink . He only needed to stage his coup at the right time . He fired Corbin and paid him off with bills that had been recorded by the bank on page eight of the ...
Contents
THE DOG ANDREW by Arthur Train Selected | 31 |
THE BLUSHING BEGINNER AND THE BEARDED JURYMAN | 89 |
THE LAW AND THE PROFITS by Octavus Roy Cohen | 93 |
Copyright | |
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Fiction Goes to Court: Favorite Stories of Lawyers and the Law Selected by ... Albert P. Blaustein No preview available - 1977 |
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