The Law of Nations. Emer de Vattel

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The Law of Nations - Emer de Vattel Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics

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with respect to taxes,

       244. Eminent domain annexed to the sovereignty, <xxx>

       245. Dominion over public property,

       246. The sovereign may make laws respecting the use of things possessed in common,

       247. Alienation of the property of a corporation,

       248. Use of common property,

       249. How each member is to enjoy it,

       250. Right of anticipation in the use of it,

       251. The same right in another case,

       252. Preservation and repairs of common possessions,

       253. Duty and right of the sovereign in that respect,

       254. Private property,

       255. The sovereign may subject it to regulations of police,

       256. Inheritances,

       CHAPTER XXI Of the Alienation of the public Property, or the Domain, and that of a Part of the State.

       257. The nation may alienate her public property,

       258. Duties of the nation in that respect,

       259. Duties of the prince,

       260. He cannot alienate the public property,

       261. The nation may give him a right to do it,

       262. Rules on that subject with respect to treaties between nation and nation,

       263. Alienation of a part of the state,

       264. Rights of the dismembered party,

       265. Whether the prince has power to dismember the state,

       CHAPTER XXII Of Rivers, Streams, and Lakes.

       266. A river that separates two territories,

       267. Bed of a river which is dried up or takes another course,

       268. Right of alluvion,

       269. Whether alluvion produces any change in the right to river,

       270. Consequence of a river changing its bed,

       271. Works tending to turn the current,

       272. or generally prejudicial to the rights of others,

       273. Rules relative to interfering rights,

       274. Lakes,

       275. Increase of a lake,

       276. Land formed on the banks of a lake,

       277. Bed of a lake dried up,

       278. Jurisdiction over lakes and rivers,

       CHAPTER XXIII Of the Sea.

       279. The sea, and its use, <xxxi>

       280. Whether the sea can be possessed, and its dominion appropriated,

       281. Nobody has a right to appropriate to himself the use of the open sea,

       282. A nation attempting to exclude another, does her an injury,

       283. She even does an injury to all nations,

       284. She may acquire an exclusive right by treaties,

       285. but not by prescription and long use,

       286. unless by virtue of a tacit agreement,

       287. The sea near the coasts may become property,

       288. Another reason for appropriating the sea bordering on the coasts,

       289. How far that possession may extend,

       290. Shores and ports,

       291. Bays and straits,

      

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