The People's Verdict

The People's Verdict
Title The People's Verdict PDF eBook
Author B. B. Lewis
Publisher
Pages 15
Release 1896
Genre Silver question
ISBN

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The People's Verdict

The People's Verdict
Title The People's Verdict PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages
Release 2008
Genre Scrapbooks
ISBN

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Article from an unknown source reports Arthur Harper's election to Mayor of Los Angeles and recaps the mayoral campaign.

The People's Verdict

The People's Verdict
Title The People's Verdict PDF eBook
Author Claudia Chwalisz
Publisher Policy Network
Pages 0
Release 2017
Genre Political participation
ISBN 9781786604361

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Offers a study of close to 50 long-form deliberative processes in Canada and Australia.

The Verdict of the People

The Verdict of the People
Title The Verdict of the People PDF eBook
Author Verdict
Publisher
Pages 16
Release 1873
Genre
ISBN

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The People's Verdict

The People's Verdict
Title The People's Verdict PDF eBook
Author S. M. Daud
Publisher
Pages 184
Release 1994
Genre Bombay Riots, Bombay, India, 1992-1993
ISBN

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December30_1991

December30_1991
Title December30_1991 PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 56
Release 1991
Genre
ISBN

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The Verdict of Battle

The Verdict of Battle
Title The Verdict of Battle PDF eBook
Author James Q. Whitman
Publisher Harvard University Press
Pages 329
Release 2012-10-31
Genre History
ISBN 0674071875

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Today, war is considered a last resort for resolving disagreements. But a day of staged slaughter on the battlefield was once seen as a legitimate means of settling political disputes. James Whitman argues that pitched battle was essentially a trial with a lawful verdict. And when this contained form of battle ceased to exist, the law of victory gave way to the rule of unbridled force. The Verdict of Battle explains why the ritualized violence of the past was more effective than modern warfare in bringing carnage to an end, and why humanitarian laws that cling to a notion of war as evil have led to longer, more barbaric conflicts. Belief that sovereigns could, by rights, wage war for profit made the eighteenth century battle’s golden age. A pitched battle was understood as a kind of legal proceeding in which both sides agreed to be bound by the result. To the victor went the spoils, including the fate of kingdoms. But with the nineteenth-century decline of monarchical legitimacy and the rise of republican sentiment, the public no longer accepted the verdict of pitched battles. Ideology rather than politics became war’s just cause. And because modern humanitarian law provided no means for declaring a victor or dispensing spoils at the end of battle, the violence of war dragged on. The most dangerous wars, Whitman asserts in this iconoclastic tour de force, are the lawless wars we wage today to remake the world in the name of higher moral imperatives.