| United States. Congress. House. Government Operations - 1972 - 762 páginas
...matter and is examining all the legal options which may be available to protect Canadian interests. "We are especially concerned to ensure observance of the principle established in tlie 1938 Trail Smelter arbitration between Canada and the United States. This lias established that... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Environment and Public Works - 1981 - 1278 páginas
...principles of international law, as well as the law of the United States, no state has the right to use or permit the use of its territory in such manner as to cause injury by fumes in or to the territory of another or the properties or persons therein, when the case is of... | |
| Cees Flinterman, Barbara Kwiatkowska, Johan G. Lammers - 1986 - 400 páginas
...be paid by those responsible. In this Canada referred to the Trail Smelter award according to which "one country may not permit the use of its territory in such a manner as to cause injury to the territory of another and shall be responsible to pay compensation... | |
| Najeeb M. Al-Nauimi, Richard Meese - 1995 - 1374 páginas
...with the costs of clean-up operations. The Secretary of State of Canada stated before its parliament: "We are especially concerned to ensure observance...country may not permit the use of its territory in such a manner as to cause injury to the territory of another and shall be responsible to pay compensation... | |
| R. Lefeber - 1996 - 384 páginas
...115 the Canadian Secretary of State for External Affairs stated that the Trail Smelter arbitration "has established that one country may not permit the use of its territory in such a manner as to cause injury to the territory of another and shall be responsible to pay compensation... | |
| Michael Bothe, Eckard Rehbinder - 2005 - 458 páginas
...v. Canada), in which an international adjudicatory body asserted the principle that a State should not permit the use of its territory in such manner as to cause injury in or to the territory of another (sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas). Romano (2000), 261 et seq.;... | |
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