Post-War International Civil Aviation Policy and the Law of the Air

Civil Aviation has become a public utility service. SALVATORE TOMASINO I} Although civil aviation has enjoyed unflagging public interest since its birth in 1919, and even before that date, the factors governing the development of civil aviation are nevertheless not widely known. This applies not so...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wassenbergh, H.A.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 1962, 1962
Edition:1st ed. 1962
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Post-War International Civil Aviation Policy and the Law of the Air  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c by H.A. Wassenbergh 
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260 |a Dordrecht  |b Springer Netherlands  |c 1962, 1962 
300 |a XII, 197 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a I Post-War International Civil Aviation Policy -- I. The Basis of Post-War Civil Aviation Policy -- II Trends in Aviation Policy in 1944 and Since -- III. Problems in the Field of Aviation Policy -- IV. Means of Aviation Policy -- V. Integration of Aviation -- II The Law of the Air -- VI. International Legal Norms with Respect to Civil Aviation -- VII. The Merits of Trends in Aviation Policy -- VIII. A New Basis for International Aviation Policy? -- IX. Future Prospects -- X. The Position of the Netherlands -- XI. Specific Developments in Regard to Aviation Policy and Its Legal Basis 
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653 |a Law of the Sea, Air and Outer Space 
653 |a Law of the sea 
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520 |a Civil Aviation has become a public utility service. SALVATORE TOMASINO I} Although civil aviation has enjoyed unflagging public interest since its birth in 1919, and even before that date, the factors governing the development of civil aviation are nevertheless not widely known. This applies not so much to technical development as to the political and economic considerations which ultimately determine the pattern of the worldwide network of air routes. Whereas, prior to World War II, civil aviation was regarded mainly as an instrument for political penetration, with perhaps the Netherlands and its K.L.M.2) as a striking exception, since 1945 civil aviation has come to be judged more on its own merits, though it has remained primarily a government matter. The political, strategic, economic, financial and social aspeCts of civil aviation together constitute a field which, particularly since World War II, has come to form the subject-matter of a more or less independent branch of foreign policy, designated 'by the term "international civil aviation policy". In spite of the dominating factors of national prestige and later of economic nationalism, States have nevertheless directly and indirectly taken upon themselves a number of obligations in the international field, thereby giving civil aviation an international legal basis