The international law of recognition |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 49
Page viii
... RECOGNITION THE EFFECTS OF RECOGNITION THE RIGHT OF UNRECOGNISED POWERS To SUE IMMUNITY FROM LEGAL PROCESS Immunity from Suit Immunity of Property VALIDITY oF LAWS AND ACTS: PUBLIC RIGHTS VALIDITY OF LAWS AND ACTS; PRIVATE RIGHTS ...
... RECOGNITION THE EFFECTS OF RECOGNITION THE RIGHT OF UNRECOGNISED POWERS To SUE IMMUNITY FROM LEGAL PROCESS Immunity from Suit Immunity of Property VALIDITY oF LAWS AND ACTS: PUBLIC RIGHTS VALIDITY OF LAWS AND ACTS; PRIVATE RIGHTS ...
Page 4
... recognition does not give the foreign State the right to treat the unrecognised Power as if it were beyond the pale of international law. is far as international law is concerned, the recognition is not creative, but declaratory. This ...
... recognition does not give the foreign State the right to treat the unrecognised Power as if it were beyond the pale of international law. is far as international law is concerned, the recognition is not creative, but declaratory. This ...
Page 7
... ignoring the internal acts of unrecognised Powers may inflict unnecessary hardships upon individuals and is contrary to the requirements of justice.“ fiecognition is both a declaration of fact and an expression Introduction 7.
... ignoring the internal acts of unrecognised Powers may inflict unnecessary hardships upon individuals and is contrary to the requirements of justice.“ fiecognition is both a declaration of fact and an expression Introduction 7.
Page 38
... unrecognised State exists in law is to create a legal vacuum within the borders of that State. It works both ways. Not only the nationals of the unrecognised ... power which it possesses to assure its exercise, but ugon the single fact of its ...
... unrecognised State exists in law is to create a legal vacuum within the borders of that State. It works both ways. Not only the nationals of the unrecognised ... power which it possesses to assure its exercise, but ugon the single fact of its ...
Page 42
... not seem to exclude the possibility o unrecognised States recognising each other, although he believes it is rarely done (op. cit" p. 280). In 1920, the Soviet Government recognised the Baltic States, to which the Allied Powers topk ...
... not seem to exclude the possibility o unrecognised States recognising each other, although he believes it is rarely done (op. cit" p. 280). In 1920, the Soviet Government recognised the Baltic States, to which the Allied Powers topk ...
Contents
3 | |
13 | |
30 | |
PART | 95 |
THE DOCTRINE OF LEGITIMACY | 105 |
PUBLIC RIGHTS | 145 |
Procedural Rights of Private Litigants | 166 |
RETROACTIVITY or RECOGNITION | 172 |
CONDITIONAL RECOGNITION | 265 |
117 | 283 |
LEGAL PERSONALITY CIF A BELLIGERENT COMMUNITY | 303 |
THE NATURE OF THE RECOGNlTlON OF BELLIGBRENCY | 333 |
THE DUTY 0P REOOONITION | 352 |
CONDITIONS FOR REOOGNITION | 364 |
TERMINATION OF BELLIOERENCY | 395 |
RECOGNITION OF INSURGENCY | 407 |
MODES 0F RECOGNITION 139 | 191 |
105 | 215 |
Br WHOM DETERMINABLE | 224 |
REVOCABILITY 0F RECOGNITION | 259 |
2? THE MEANING OF THE DOCTRINE | 411 |
THE DOCTRINE OF NONRECOGNITION AND THE MAXIM | 420 |
NONRECOGNITION as A SANCTION | 441 |
Index | 453 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accorded act of recognition admission Annual Digest applied Arbitration Article authority Bank belligerent community belligerent rights blockade Britain British Government certificate civil claim conclusion conflict constitutive Convention Court of Appeal Czechoslovakia decided decision declared definition denied difficulty diplomatic representatives doctrine effect entitled established government Estonian Ethiopia Executive exequatur exercise existence fact facto government facto recognition first Foreign Office German Hackworth Haile Selassie Haiti held Hudson ibid immunity imply recognition independent insurgents international law international personality judgment judicial League of Nations letters of credence Manchukuo McNair ment Mexico Moore neutrality non-recognition Normand obligations official Oflice opinion Oppenheim organisation parties political department principle Professor Lauterpacht question recog recognition of belligerency regarded regime Republic Resolution retroactivity Russian 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