R. Y. Jennings
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Territorial Change
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In this chapter, the author talks about some problems that affect the whole question of territorial change. The whole course of modern history testifies to the central place of State territory in international relations. The legal rules and procedures for effecting territorial changes lie at the core of the whole system of international law. The existence or not of a title depends ultimately upon the existence of certain facts. The primary meaning of 'title' is the vestitive facts which the law recognizes as creating a right. There is yet one more category of rules or principles for the determination of territorial sovereignty that must be mentioned: the body of legal rules which is concerned specifically with frontier or boundary disputes. These rules may be serviceable whatever the mode of acquisition of the territory; and indeed the mode of acquisition is often, in this type of frontier dispute, irrelevant.

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The Acquisition of Territory in International Law

With a New Introduction by Marcelo G. Kohen

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