Background
Chiu, Hungdah was born on March 23, 1936 in Shanghai, China. Son of Han-ping and Ming-non (Yang) Chiu. came to the United States, 1960.
(Mter an international organization is established, if it ...)
Mter an international organization is established, if it is necessary for it to acquire certain rights or assume duties or new functions not provided in its constitution, there are four techniques to achieve that 1 end. The first is to amend the constitution of the organization. If the organization has only a limited number of members, then this technique is not too cumbersome. But, the procedure for amending a constitution is usually complicated and requires a substantial period of time. Thus this technique has at least the disadvantage of delay. 2 The second technique is to conclude a treaty among the member States of the organization. The organization is not a party to that treaty, but it can acquire some rights, assume some duties, or new functions under the treaty. 3 The disadvantage of this technique is similar to the first one, i. e. , the conclusion of a multilateral treaty may mean delay since the procedure involved is so complicated and cumber some. 1 E. g. , the Constitution of the ILO, Cmd. No. 393 (T. S. No. 4 of 1919), 1919 13 Foreign ReI. U. S. : Paris Conf. 695 (1947), was amended on October 9, 1946,62 Stat. 3485, T. I. A. S. No. 1868, 15 U. N. T. S.
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(Since 1945, the law of the sea has been developing at a r...)
Since 1945, the law of the sea has been developing at a rapid pace, becoming one of the most important areas of public international law. In addition to the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, there are more than one hundred treaties or agreements relating to this area. The aim of this book is to introduce the reader to the principal aspects of the law of the sea in a comprehensive one-volume reference guide. Important treaties, cases and writers' opinions are all included.
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(Mter an international organization is established, if it ...)
Mter an international organization is established, if it is necessary for it to acquire certain rights or assume duties or new functions not provided in its constitution, there are four techniques to achieve that 1 end. The first is to amend the constitution of the organization. If the organization has only a limited number of members, then this technique is not too cumbersome. But, the procedure for amending a constitution is usually complicated and requires a substantial period of time. Thus this technique has at least the disadvantage of delay. 2 The second technique is to conclude a treaty among the member States of the organization. The organization is not a party to that treaty, but it can acquire some rights, assume some duties, or new functions under the treaty. 3 The disadvantage of this technique is similar to the first one, i. e., the conclusion of a multilateral treaty may mean delay since the procedure involved is so complicated and cumber some. 1 E. g., the Constitution of the ILO, Cmd. No. 393 (T. S. No. 4 of 1919), 1919 13 Foreign ReI. U. S.: Paris Conf. 695 (1947), was amended on October 9, 1946,62 Stat. 3485, T. I. A. S. No. 1868, 15 U. N. T. S."
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( Hong Kong's expanding export-import trade and importanc...)
Hong Kong's expanding export-import trade and importance as a capital market have made it one of the major economic centers of Asia, second only to Tokyo. Consequently, the reversion of this previously capitalist city to the People's Republic of China ten years from now will have serious ramifications for the Western financial world. There is much speculation concerning the impact of communist control of the three principal factors which have contributed to Hong Kong's current standing: its political and social stability, economic reform, and the British legal system.
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Chiu, Hungdah was born on March 23, 1936 in Shanghai, China. Son of Han-ping and Ming-non (Yang) Chiu. came to the United States, 1960.
Bachelor of Laws, National Taiwan University, 1958. Master of Arts with honors, Long Island University, 1962. Master of Laws, Harvard University, 1962.
Doctor of Juridical Science, Harvard University, 1965.
Associate in research East Asian Research Center, Harvard University, 1964-1965. Associate professor international law National Taiwan University, 1965-1966. Research associate in law Harvard University, 1966-1970, 72-74.
Visiting professor law National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan, 1970-1972. Associate professor law University Maryland, Baltimore, 1974-1977, professor, 1977—2002, professor emeritus, since 2002. Chairman board directors Modern China Studies Quarterly, since 2000, Center for Modern China, Princeton, New Jersey, since 2000.
Minister of state Executive Yuan (Cabinet), Republic of China, Taiwan, 1993-1994. Member Presidential Committee on National Unification, Taiwan, 1995-2000, ambassador-at-large, 1998-2000. Served to Second lieutenant Chinese Army, 1958-1960.
(Mter an international organization is established, if it ...)
(Mter an international organization is established, if it ...)
( Hong Kong's expanding export-import trade and importanc...)
(Since 1945, the law of the sea has been developing at a r...)
(A study of the Hsin-hai Revolution of Sun Yat-sen which b...)
(Slight wear. Marker mark to page edges. Owner stamp to fr...)
Delaware United Nations Conference Law of the Sea, 1976—1982. Chairman of the board Center for Modern China, since 2000. Member American Society International Law (panel on China and international order 1969-1974, chairman interest group on law Pacific region 1987-1993), Association for Asian Studies (committee on Asian law 1976-1989), American Association for Chinese Studies (vice president 1982-1984, president 1985-1987), Association American Law Schools (chair international legal exchange section 1986-1988), Association Chinese Social Scientists, N.A. (president 1984-1986), Chinese Society International Law (president 1993-2000), International Law Association (president 1998-2000, permanent vice president since 2000).
Married Yuan-yuan Hsieh, May 14, 1966. 1 son, Wei-hsueh.