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Official Site of the U.S. Air Force - Home

Official Site of the U.S. Air Force - Home

Congressional Research Service Reports FAS | Secrecy ||| Search | Join FAS The Congressional Research Service, a component of the Library of Congress, conducts research and analysis for Congress on a broad range of issues of national policy. While many CRS memoranda are generated in response to individual Member or staff inquiries and are confidential, most CRS reports are available to anyone who has access to a congressional intranet. Yet at the direction of Congress, CRS does not make even its non-confidential publications directly available to the public online. Topical Index of CRS Reports (via Phi Beta Iota) Secrecy and Information Policy Intelligence Homeland Security Nuclear Weapons and Arms Control Conventional Weapons Systems Terrorism General National Security Topics Middle East Foreign Policy and Regional Affairs Space Policy Miscellaneous Topics Related Resources Maintained by Steven Aftergood

Home - County of Santa Clara Trail Watch Academy Message from County Executive on Reform Efforts View Real-Time Traffic Congestion View Real-Time Traffic Cameras Santa Clara County Government 101 Academy 18 USC Part I - CRIMES | Title 18 - Crimes and Criminal Procedure 65. Malicious mischief 1361 67. Military and Navy 1381 [68. Repealed.] 69. Amendments 2006—Pub. Pub. Pub. 2004—Pub. Pub. 2003—Pub. Pub. 2002—Pub. 1998—Pub. 1996—Pub. Pub. Pub. Pub. 1994—Pub. Pub. Pub. 1992—Pub. Pub. 1990—Pub. Pub. Pub. 1988—Pub. Pub. 1986—Pub. Pub. Croft and Associates | Architecture USC : Title 8 - ALIENS AND NATIONALITY Multiple entries for a section are listed most recent first, within the section. The Session Year indicates which session of Congress was responsible for the changes classified. The Congress number forms the first part of the Public Law number; each Congress has two sessions. Abbreviations used in the Description of Change column: An empty field implies a standard amendment. "new" means a new section or new note, or all new text of an existing section or note. The Public Law field is linked to the development of the law in the Thomas system at the Library of Congress. The Statutes at Large field is linked to the text of the law, in the context of its volume of the Statutes at Large, at the Government Printing Office. The Statutes at Large references have been rendered in the format used as page numbers in the Public Law web pages to which we link, to facilitate copy-paste into browser "find on this (web) page" tools. top

Clark Nexsen | Architecture & Engineering Sources of International Law - Pritzker Legal Research Center The generally recognized authoritative statement on the sources of international law is the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), Article 38, which specifies that the Court, in deciding disputes, shall apply: international conventions, whether general or particular, establishing rules expressly recognized by the contesting states; international custom, as evidence of a general practice accepted as law; the general principles of law recognized by civilized nations; subject to the provisions of Article 59, judicial decisions and the teachings of the most highly qualified publicists of the various nations, as subsidiary means for the determination of rules of law. The first three of these--treaties, custom, and principles of law--are sometimes referred to by lawyers and librarians with a common law background as "primary sources" of international law. Note that case law is considered only a "subsidiary means." For further reading: Buergenthal, Thomas and Sean D.

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