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Nonmilitary Strategies and Competition for Power: The Need for Expanded Regulation of Coercion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2017

Walter L. Williams Jr*
Affiliation:
Marshall-Wythe School of Law, College of William & Mary

Abstract

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Type
Rules for Unarmed Conflict in the Intermediate Status between Peace and War
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1976

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References

1 This process of coercion is described in detail in M. S. MCDOUGAL & F. FELICIANO, LAW AND MINIMUM WORLD PUBLIC ORDER, Ch. 1 (1961).

2 68 AJIL 410 (1974).

3 See Paust & Blaustein, supra note 2.

4 See I. Shihata. Destination Embargo of Arab Oil: Its Legality under International Law, 68 AJIL 591 (1974); J Boorman, Economic Coercion in International Law: The Arab Oil Weapon and the Ensuing Juridical Issues, 9 J. INT'L L. & ECON. 205 (1974); J. Muir, The Boycott in International Law, id. 187.

5 Supra note 4.

6 See MCDOUGAL & FELICIANO, supra note 1, especially Ch. 3, for suggestive discussion.