Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for Promoting Useful Knowledge, Том 60American Philosophical Society, 1921 |
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Стр. 141
... consent to ratification with or without reservations and ratification , ( 3 ) exchange of ratifications . Often legislation must be passed before the treaty becomes executable and “ putting into effect " may be considered a fourth step ...
... consent to ratification with or without reservations and ratification , ( 3 ) exchange of ratifications . Often legislation must be passed before the treaty becomes executable and “ putting into effect " may be considered a fourth step ...
Стр. 144
... consent and advice of that branch of Congress are indispensable in the formation of treaties . According to the practice of this government the Senate is not ordinarily consulted in the initiatory state of a negotiation , but its consent ...
... consent and advice of that branch of Congress are indispensable in the formation of treaties . According to the practice of this government the Senate is not ordinarily consulted in the initiatory state of a negotiation , but its consent ...
Стр. 145
... consent be evidenced ? Express consent to reserva- tions by statement in the act of ratification or by exchange of notes would of course by sufficient , 27 as would acceptance without objec- 27 The Senate advised ratification of the ...
... consent be evidenced ? Express consent to reserva- tions by statement in the act of ratification or by exchange of notes would of course by sufficient , 27 as would acceptance without objec- 27 The Senate advised ratification of the ...
Стр. 146
... consent of the other contracting power . ... The Senate has no right to ratify the treaty and introduce new terms into it , which shall be obligatory upon the other power , although it may refuse its ratificatiton , or make such ...
... consent of the other contracting power . ... The Senate has no right to ratify the treaty and introduce new terms into it , which shall be obligatory upon the other power , although it may refuse its ratificatiton , or make such ...
Стр. 147
... consent of the full treaty - making power , the United States is not bound unless the foreign nation can show that it had reason to suppose the note had been constitutionally accepted . There would certainly be such a presumption where ...
... consent of the full treaty - making power , the United States is not bound unless the foreign nation can show that it had reason to suppose the note had been constitutionally accepted . There would certainly be such a presumption where ...
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
act of Congress action administration agreements aliens amended American anticyclone appointed arbitration Asmodeus authority bismuth Book of Tobit Britain citizens claims Comp Cong congressional consent controversy Corwin Crandall criminal cylinders decision declaration delegated departments Digest diplomatic officers effect enforce entelodonts executive power exercise existence expressly federal courts foreign affairs foreign governments foreign nations foreign relations power guarantees Hague Convention Ibid independent infra international law interpretation Jay treaty jurisdiction Justice law and treaty law of nations Law Rev League of Nations legislative limitations ment military Moore national government naval negotiation neutrality obligation offenses Oreodon organs parallax peace political practice President President's principle PROC question ratification recognized representative resolution Rose Atoll Secretary Senate Sess Stat statutes supra Supreme Court Taft territory tion Treaty of Versailles treaty power treaty-making power U. S. Constitution United vessels vested violation Willoughby
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Стр. 371 - Nothing contained in this convention shall be so construed as to require the United States of America to depart from its traditional policy of not intruding upon, interfering with, or entangling itself in the political questions of policy or internal administration of any foreign state; nor shall anything contained in the said convention be construed to imply a relinquishment by the United States of America of its traditional attitude toward purely American questions.
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