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Part I

1. B
2-4. Principal sources of Intl law: (38 ICJ Statute)
a) International conventions, establishing rules expressly recognized by the contesting states
b) International custom, as evidence of gen. practice accepted as law
c) General principles of law recognized by civilized nations
5. 1980 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
6. C
7-9. Requisites of Treaties:
a) must be between states
b) in between states
c) governed by international law
10-11. Restrictions on subject matter of treaties:
a) Jus cogens restrictions
b) UN Charter restrictions
12. Jus dispositivum
13. Jus cogens
14. Alternat
15. B. accession
16. Rebus sic stantibus
17. Customary intl law
18. F
19. a)monism
20. b)dualism
21. transformation theory
22. hard transformation theory
23. B. indelible allegiance
24. B
25. T
26. State succession
27. clean slate doctrine
28. obligations erga omnes
29. -30. a) attributable to the state under the intl law
b) constitutes breach of an intl obligation
31. B
32. state boundaries or frontiers
33. C. thalweg doctrine
34-35. a) Constitutive theory
b) declaratory theory
36. F
37. A
38. D
39-42. a) consuls –general
b) consuls
c) vice- consuls
d) consular agents
43. Protective theory
44. D. extraterritoriality
45. C. reconduction to the border
46. B. Act of State doctrine
47. UN
48. Antonio Guterres
49. Domestic jurisdiction clause
50. Hugo Grotius

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