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International Law

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1 Review
California Academic Press, 2009 - Law - 498 pages
The fourth edition of this widely used text book combines narratives sections that explain the basic law with cases, questions, and problems that allow students to read actual legal materials and apply them to other similar or distinguishable situations. These materials do not assume that undergraduates are less able than graduate students to grasp difficult issues, nor do they assume that undergraduates cannot deal with a variety of complex instruments that bear on a particular problem. Rather, Epps focuses on the central problems of international law, assuming no prior legal knowledge except that gained by living in a society organized under a legal system, and encourages students to work through a number of questions and and problems that are presented in a variety of international contexts. The book's coverage is comprehensive including recent materials on sources, treaties, jurisdiction, extradition, the law of the sea, the environment, international entities, human rights, international courts, terrorism and war.

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Review: International Law

User Review  - Jesse - Goodreads

Actually very effective capsule summaries of the major areas of international law. Well-researched and fairly comprehensive, but still easily digested. Great for those interested in the subject that may not have a legal education ( Ie poly sci majors, etc.). Read full review

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About the author (2009)

Valerie Epps is a professor of law at Suffolk University Law School.

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