From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Good neighborliness is a general principle of international law with particular importance for the field of international environmental law. The principle "obligates states to try to reconcile their interests with the interests of neighboring states", [1] and found expression in a number of 20th Century international legal rulings, most notably the Trail smelter arbitration between the United States and Canada. [2]

References

  1. ^ "New Perspectives on International Environmental Law". The Yale Law Journal. 82 (8): 1664. July 1973. doi: 10.2307/795366. JSTOR  795366.
  2. ^ Globalization Redux: New Name, Same Game. University Press of America. 2004. pp. 85–86. ISBN  0-7618-2922-9.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Good neighborliness is a general principle of international law with particular importance for the field of international environmental law. The principle "obligates states to try to reconcile their interests with the interests of neighboring states", [1] and found expression in a number of 20th Century international legal rulings, most notably the Trail smelter arbitration between the United States and Canada. [2]

References

  1. ^ "New Perspectives on International Environmental Law". The Yale Law Journal. 82 (8): 1664. July 1973. doi: 10.2307/795366. JSTOR  795366.
  2. ^ Globalization Redux: New Name, Same Game. University Press of America. 2004. pp. 85–86. ISBN  0-7618-2922-9.



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