[771] Thus formulated by the distinguished jurist James Brown Scott. Cf. Report of the Seventeenth Annual Lake Mohonk Conference (1911), pp. 35 ff. Professor Scott here shows how the growth of juridical institutions between nations is similar to that within nations, only later and slower. The stages of this growth are self-redress, arbitration, courts of justice.
[772] See Sir Charles Bruce, “The Modern Conscience in Relation to the Treatment of Dependent Peoples and Communities,” Papers on Inter-Racial Problems (1911), pp. 279 ff.
[773] Papers on Inter-Racial Problems (1911), ed. G. Spiller, p. 286.
[774] For this subject viewed from a Chinese standpoint, see Edward Alsworth Ross, The Changing Chinese (1911), p. 170.
[775] Grotius (Hugo de Groot), The Rights of War and Peace, tr. Campbell (1901–1903). On Grotius see Hill, History of Diplomacy (1905–1906), vol. ii, pp. 569 ff.; Andrew D. White, Seven Great Statesmen (1910), pp. 55 ff.; Dunning, A History of Political Theories (1905), vol. ii, chap. v.
[776] Andrew D. White, Seven Great Statesmen (1910), p. 79.
[777] See above, p. 240.
[778] James Bryce, Studies in History and Jurisprudence (1901), vol. ii, p. 167.
[779] Hill, History of Diplomacy (1905–1906), vol. ii, p. 573.
[780] Seven Great Statesmen (1910), p. 73.