| International relations - 1918 - 828 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...the people, expressed in the form which is possible for them. (2) The interests of the native tribes as regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained.... | |
| Arthur Henderson - Labor - 1918 - 138 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...the people, expressed in the form which is possible for them. (2) The interests of the native tribes as regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained.... | |
| Arthur Henderson - Labor - 1918 - 144 pages
...take account in each locality of the wishes of the people, expressed in the form which is possible for them. (2) The interests of the native tribes as regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained. (3) The whole of the revenues would be devoted to the wellbeing and development of the colonies themselves.... | |
| Arthur Berriedale Keith - Belgium - 1919 - 352 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained. (3) The whole of the revenues would be devoted to the wellbeing and development of the colonies themselves.'... | |
| Paul Underwood Kellogg, Arthur Gleason - Labor - 1919 - 524 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...expressed in the form which is possible to them. 2. The interest of the native tribes as regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained. 4. ECONOMIC... | |
| Parker Thomas Moon - Imperialism - 1926 - 624 pages
...League of Nations, and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...concerned to safeguard the rights of the natives." In particular, this system would "take account" of the wishes of the natives; it would defend their... | |
| United States. Department of State - United States - 1933 - 1012 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, whilst respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained. (3) The whole of the revenues would be devoted to the wellbeing and development of the colonies themselves.... | |
| R. M. Douglas - Political Science - 2004 - 328 pages
...create a system of control for the colonies which, 'whilst respecting National Sovereignty would . . . safeguard the rights of the natives under the best conditions possible for them . . .'.5 There were two principal reasons for this rapid retreat from the concept of international... | |
| R. M. Douglas, Michael Dennis Callahan, Elizabeth Bishop - History - 2006 - 206 pages
...create a system of control for the colonies which, "whilst respecting National Sovereignty would . . . safeguard the rights of the natives under the best conditions possible for them . . . "6 There were two principal reasons for this rapid retreat from the concept of international... | |
| World War, 1914-1918 - 1918 - 698 pages
...the League of Nations and maintained by its guarantee, which, while respecting national sovereignty, would be alike inspired by broad conceptions of economic...regards the ownership of the soil would be maintained. 3. The whole of the revenues would be devoted to the well-being and development of the colonies themselves.... | |
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