- Rights; Van Asbeck's work was a
great influence on
Schermers'
doctoral thesis. In 1963
Schermers was
appointed lector (roughly
equivalent to reader)...
-
Schermer (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈsxɛrmər] ) is a
former muni****lity in the Netherlands, in the
province of
North Holland. The name
comes from "skir mere"...
-
Lloyd G.
Schermer (born 1927) is an
American businessman and artist. He was born in St. Louis, Missouri.
Schermer served in the
United States Navy during...
-
Judith Schermer (born on
February 19, 1941) is a Detroit-born, Philadelphia-based
painter who also
wrote and
illustrated for
children during the 1970s...
- John
Schermer (born 1948) is an
American bridge player from Seattle, Washington.
North American Bridge Championships (5)
Vanderbilt (1) 1992
Senior Knockout...
-
Archived from the
original on 3
August 2020.
Retrieved 3
January 2020.
Schermers-Blokker,
International Institutional Law, 900–901 Petersmann, The GATT/WTO...
-
Dutch astronomer,
Marxist theorist and
social revolutionary Henry G.
Schermers (1928 in Epe – 2006)
lawyer and
academic Menno-Jan
Kraak (born 1958 in...
-
votes require an
absolute majority? -
Parliamentary Education Office".
Schermers,
Henry G.; Blokker,
Niels M. (2011).
International Institutional Law:...
-
Michael Brant Shermer (born
September 8, 1954) is an
American science writer,
historian of science,
executive director of The
Skeptics Society, and founding...
- thefreedictionary.com. "Qualified majority"
redirects to this definition.
Schermers,
Henry G.; Blokker,
Niels M. (2011).
International Institutional Law:...