About This Book
The essay examines neutral rights and obligations arising from the war in South Africa, tracing the policies adopted by the United States and various European powers and assessing how those governments applied neutrality rules. It analyzes legal questions concerning contraband, neutral ports, and trade with the enemy, and highlights divergences between British practice and Continental and American legal opinion. Drawing on diplomatic correspondence, official reports, and legislative debates, the study reviews claims and protections afforded to foreign citizens and the practical administration of neutral duties by consuls and governments during the conflict.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
In the Shadow of Death
by P. H. Kritzinger
The Black Watch: A Record in Action
by Joe Cassells
Japan and the Pacific, and a Japanese View of the Eastern Question
by Manjiro Inagaki
The Grand Old Man / Or, the Life and Public Services of the Right Honorable William Ewart Gladstone, Four Times Prime Minister of England
by Richard B. Cook
Ballads
by William Makepeace Thackeray
The Napoleon Gallery / or, Illustrations of the life and times of the emperor of France
by Etienne Achille Réveil