The International Law of Recognition: With Special Reference to Practice in Great Britain and the United States |
Contents
THE RECOGNITION OF STATES AND THE OBLIGATORY | 13 |
THE MEANING OF THE DOCTRINE | 27 |
THEORY OF THE RECOGNITION OF STATES | 30 |
29 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accorded act of recognition admitted American courts Annual Digest applied argued Article Austria authority Baty belligerent community belligerent rights blockade Britain British Government civil claim conclusion Convention Court of Appeal Czechoslovakia decision declaratory theory declared decree denied doctrine effect entitled established government Estonian Ethiopia exequatur exercise existence fact facto government facto recognition Fauchille Foreign Office Germany Hackworth held Hudson ibid immunity imply recognition independent insurgents international law international personality jure government jure recognition Kelantan Lauterpacht laws of war League of Nations Manchukuo McNair ment Mexico Moore neutrality Noël-Henry non-recognition Normand obligations occupation opinion Oppenheim organisation parties practice principle Professor Lauterpacht question recog recognition of belligerency refused regarded régime Republic retroactivity revolution rights and duties Rougier Russian Schwarzenberger sovereign sovereignty Soviet decrees Soviet Government Soviet Union Spain Spanish Spanish Civil War statehood territory tion treaty United Nations unrecognised government unrecognised powers validity writers