The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic representations in order to protect their nationals, or to refer a controversy to a court of international jurisdiction for that purpose, when the said nationals have had available the... Report with Related Documents - Página 188por United States. Delegation (International American Conference (9th : 1948 : Bogotá, Colombia)) - 1948 - 317 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Pan American Union - 1948 - 708 páginas
...ARTICLE VII. The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic repre- A j\ sentations in order to protect their nationals, or to refer a controversy to a court of international If. 5. jurisdiction for that purpose, when the said nationals have had available the means to place... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1959 - 560 páginas
...they exercise their rights. A state cannot make diplomatic representations in order to protect its nationals or to refer a controversy to a court of...had available the means to place their case before the competent courts of the respective state. "Therefore : "(a) There is no denial of justice when... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1960 - 762 páginas
...they exercise their rights. A state cannot make diplomatic representations in order to protect its nationals or to refer a controversy to a court of...had available the means to place their case before the competent courts of the respective state. "Therefore : "a. There is no denial of justice when aliens... | |
| 1968 - 702 páginas
...governed by agreements or treaties in force," or to claims of nationals of one State against another State "when the said nationals have had available the means...competent domestic courts of the respective State," then it is obliged to declare itself to be without jurisdiction to hear the controversy, and the controversy... | |
| 1972 - 728 páginas
...agreements or treaties in force on the date of the conclusion of the present Treaty. ARTICLE VII The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic...pacific means for the solution of controversies, nor the recommendations of their use, shall, in the case of an armed attack, be ground for delaying the exercise... | |
| E. Lauterpacht - 1973 - 564 páginas
...regarded as unreasonable or unjust" (op. cit., p. 331 [ Translation by the Registry]). 13" "The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic...competent domestic courts of the respective State." (Art. VII of the Pact of Bogota, 1948.) Finally, the United States, which had found in Borchard a vigorous... | |
| F. V. García Amador, Louis Bruno Sohn, Richard R. Baxter - 1974 - 420 páginas
...available to the aforementioned nationals. Therefore: a) There is no denial of justice when aliens have had available the means to place their case before competent domestic courts of the respective States. b) The State has fulfilled its international obligations when the judicial authority pronounces... | |
| Great Britain. Foreign and Commonwealth Office - 1956 - 938 páginas
...agreements or treaties in force on the date of the conclusion of the present Treaty. ARTICLE 7 The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic...competent domestic courts of the respective State. ARTICLE 8 Neither recourse to pacific means for the solution of controversies, nor the recommendation of their... | |
| René Jean Dupuy - 1984 - 514 páginas
...the insertion in the Bogota Convention of the important Article VII, according to which : "The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic...competent domestic courts of the respective State." This provision, in the opinion of most of the great powers, denoted a revolutionary change in the juridical... | |
| Shea, Geraldine Halls - 341 páginas
...article dealt directly with the problem of diplomatic protection and provided: Article VII. The High Contracting Parties bind themselves not to make diplomatic...competent domestic courts of the respective state. 41 Although the proponents of this article contended that it represented nothing more than the established... | |
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