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Пособие Public Law (the last).doc
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    1. Complete these sentences with prepositions.

1. Each legal system is assumed to be modelled ___________state law, or ___________ least strongly resemble it.

2. Most of the rules of international law aim __________regulating the behavior of states.

3. Unlike states, all other international subjects have a limited capacity to be vested_________ international rights and powers.

4. Holders of international rights, powers and obligations make _______ the international community.

5. Unlike states, all other international subjects __________ account of their inherent characteristics possess a limited legal capacity.

6. Insurgents assert themselves ________force, and acquire international status proportionate ________ their power and authority.

7. The possible suppression of secondary subjects such as public corporations, private associations would not result _________ the demise of the whole legal system.

8. _________ states individuals are the principle legal subjects.

9. Insurgents come into being _________ their struggle _______ the state, to which they formerly belonged.

10. _________ historical reasons, there are _________ present about two hundred states, including a few mini-states.

    1. Match the words making pairs used in the text and use them in sentences of your own.

1. crucial

a. links

2. legal

b. associations

3. public

c. entities

4. world

d. persons

5. international

e. way

6. economic

f. feature

7. stable

g. fact

8. stateless

h. community

9. distinct

i. obligations

10. private

j. corporations

11. salient

k. beings

12. human

l. number

13. limited

m. rights

14. sovereign

n. feature

15. judicial

o. proceedings

Grammar revision

IV. Translate these sentences into Russian. Pay attention to the underlined words.

1. This enquiry should therefore begin with a note of warning.

2. Failure to grasp this crucial fact would inevitably entail a serious

misinterpretation of the impact of law on this community.

  1. The first salient feature of international law is that most of its rules

aim at regulating the behave our of states, not that of individuals.

  1. Today it could be maintained with greater truthfulness that without

the protection of state human beings are likely to endure more suffering and hardship than what is likely to be their lot in the normal course of events.

  1. National systems encompass very many legal subjects: citizens,

foreigners residing in the territory of the state, corporal bodies, and

state institutions (if endowed with legal personality).

  1. All other subjects either exercise effective authority over territory for a limited period of time only or have no territorial basis whatsoever.

  2. Were states to disappear, the present international community would either fall apart or change radically.

  3. There is another category of international subjects, namely insurgents, who come into being through their struggle against the state to which they formerly belonged.

  4. Insurgents are therefore not easily accepted by the international community unless they can prove that they exercise some of the sovereign rights typical of states.