- Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
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ItemDRUGS PROSECUTIONS IN VIETNAM: THE MODERN PROPAGANDA TRIALNicholson, P ; Kieu, T (MONASH UNIV, FAC LAW, 2008-01-01)
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ItemTrusts, powers and liens: An exercise in ground-clearingBANT, E ( 2009)
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ItemNotice and knowledge in private law claimsBRYAN, M ( 2009)
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ItemAccess to justice in Vietnam: State supply – private distrustNicholson, P ; Gillespie, J ; Chen, A (Routledge, 2016-01-01)
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ItemThe Merits and Limits of Comparativism: National Treatment in International Investment Law and the WTOKurtz, J ; Schill, S (Oxford University Press, 2011-01-01)
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ItemTribal Constitutionalism: States, Tribes, and the Governance of MembershipGover, K (Oxford University Press, 2011-01-01)
In settler societies, tribal self-governance creates a legal distinction between indigeneity (defined by settler governments) and tribal membership (defined by tribes). Many legally indigenous persons are not tribal members, and some tribal members are not legally indigenous. This book considers the membership rules included in the constitutions and membership codes of nearly 750 recognized tribes in Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States. It addresses the first-order question of tribal constitutionalism: who are the members of tribes, and how are they chosen? The question is of practical and theoretical import. A large proportion of indigenous peoples in each state are not enrolled in a recognized tribe, and the majority of indigenous peoples do not live near their tribal territories. The book's empirical study challenges many of the assumptions used to model tribalism in theories of cultural pluralism, especially those that depict tribes as distinctively insular, ascriptive, and territorially-confined. The book shows that while they are descent-based groups, tribes also self-constitute relationally, by enrolling non-descendants in accordance with cultural and social criteria, and by recruiting from other indigenous communities. The book draws on tribal law and practice, political theory, legal doctrine, policy, and demographic data to critically assess the strategies used by tribes and states to manage the jurisdictional and ideological challenges of tribal membership governance.
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ItemIntroduction: A Sustainable Future for Communal Lands, Resources and CommunitiesGodden, L ; Tehan, M ; Godden, L ; Tehan, M (Routledge, 2010)
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ItemThe Security Council’s alliance of gender legitimacy: The symbolic capital of Resolution 1325OTTO, D ; Charlesworth, H ; Coicaud, J (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
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