On generally recognized norms of International Law
Table of contents
Share
QR
Metrics
On generally recognized norms of International Law
Annotation
PII
S102694520018875-3-
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Evgeny A. Korovin 
Affiliation: USSR Academy of Sciences
Address: Russian Federation
Edition
Pages
273-278
Abstract

There are two camps of states with opposite socio-economic systems in the world. There are numerous ties between them in the economic, political sphere, even military cooperation. The norms regulating these relations – generally accepted norms of International Law, recognized as binding from the point of view of both the bourgeois and the socialist state, have a special legal nature. They were created with the participation of the Soviet State, and this is one of the forms in which the international struggle and cooperation of the two systems are carried out, characterizing the current stage of the development of international relations.

Keywords
universally recognized norms of International Law, states of opposing systems, norms binding on all states, forms of struggle between the two systems
Acknowledgment
The article was published in the journal “Soviet State and Law” (1951), No. 9, pp. 14–19. Abstract and key words were compiled by Doctor of Law G.G. Shinkaretskaya.
Date of publication
23.03.2022
Number of purchasers
15
Views
830
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
Previous versions
S102694520018875-3-1 Дата внесения правок в статью - 22.03.2022
Cite   Download pdf

References

1. Akad. A. Ya. Vyshinsky. International Law and international organization // Soviet State and Law. 1948. No. 1. P. 4 (in Russ.).

2. Foreign policy of the USSR. M., 1944. Vol. I. P. 194; vol. II. P. 714, 830; 1946. Vol. IV. P. 293, 368 (in Russ.).

3. Lenin V.I. Essays. Vol. 9. P. 43; vol. 16. P. 284; vol. 17. P. 161; vol. 26. P. 223; vol. 28. P. 169, 170; vol. 31. P. 446; vol. 33. P. 129 (in Russ.).

4. Marx K., Engels F. Essays. Vol. XI, part I. P. 312; vol. XII, part 2. P. 212, 223, 257 (in Russ.).

5. Stalin I. Marxism and problems of linguistics. M., 1950. P. 19 (in Russ.).

6. Stalin I.V. Questions of Leninism. 9th ed. P. 312; 10th ed. P. 611; 11th ed. P. 573 (in Russ.).

7. Stalin I.V. Essays. Vol. 4. P. 247; vol. 10. P. 122, 123 (in Russ.).

Comments

No posts found

Write a review
Translate