International law; definition of States; recognition of States; sovereignty; territorial limits of national jurisdiction

Front Cover
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1906
 

Contents

Foreign sovereigns
15
France
20
Procedure
27
The State and its government
40
Conquest 1156
45
Evidence
53
Burden of proof 1238
66
CHAPTER III
67
Recognition of belligerency Continued
70
Conditions of intervention
73
H Doc 551III
81
Article XXXV treaty of 1846
91
Privateers
98
PASSPORTS
107
In the United States 493
133
Recognition of belligerency
164
Prisoners of
166
Vessels
174
Legality and policy 1219
176
CHAPTER XVII
180
Condemnation
181
Vessels of
187
A belligerent right 1266
188
2 Quarantine
191
Acts not prohibited
193
Territorial operation of laws
197
Jurisdiction over ports
203
Breach of blockade
204
Treatment of the wounded 1134
207
2 Refusal of neutralization 951
208
Hayti 954
216
Interruption of commercial relations
219
Unauthorized or counterfeit money
225
Neutral rights and duties
233
3 Question of extraterritoriality
238
Defenses
240
CHAPTER XIII
242
CHAPTER IV
255
Effects of change of sovereigntyContinued
256
Territorial expansion of United StatesContinued
257
Power to settle
264
End or suspension of privileges
267
CHAPTER VI
273
Enforcement of neutral duties
277
Right of interposition not assignable 982
288
Cessation of blockade
289
Supremacy of territorial sovereign
291
Internal development 91
303
To whom issued
309
Claim of impressment
317
Loss of right to protection
328
Fourteen Diamond Rings
329
Germany 823
331
Guaranty of free and open transit
344
Ameliorations
350
ClaytonBulwer treaty
351
Kiel Canal
371
Grounds of intervention
376
Naturalization
377
3 Protocol of February 7 1905 962
390
Nationality of married women
408
Cutting of cables 1176
409
Conclusiveness as to property 1242
414
Double allegiance
426
Military occupation
428
Annexation of Texas
446
Prisoners 1177
451
14 Servia
454
Damages
461
Applications
503
Grounds of refusal
512
Effect of extraterritoriality
522
Disabilities
541
Military service
547
Guano Islands
555
War measures
559
Compulsory or assisted emigration
560
Seamen
566
1 Persons included
573
Extradition a national
579
Occupied territory
588
Irregular recovery of fugitive
603
Exchange of ratifications
609
Documentary proofs
611
CHAPTER V
612
Whale fisheries 169
614
Expenses
620
Prize money and bounty
633
1 Minister must be personally acceptable
637
2 Provisions for individual election 380
639
INTEROCEANIC COMMUNICATIONS
652
Relations with the Navy
656
Straits
658
Straits of Magellan
664
Official correspondence
670
Embargo 1098
672
Ceremonial
681
Classes and titles
696
Marginal
698
CHAPTER VIII
699
Freedom of the seas
708
Powers and duties
717
7 Question of defensive power 150
722
Shipping and seamen
723
Recovery of damages
729
Bays 153
737
Negotiation and conclusion
739
Determination of boundaries
743
Prohibition of visit and search in time of peace
746
Boundaries of the United States
749
Agreements not submitted to the Senate
752
Interpretation
763
Northeastern Fisheries
767
5 Miscellaneous cases 769
769
Nonpecuniary redress
775
Legal remedies
778
Barbary powers
783
Central America
791
Chile
797
Kinds
801
1 Siege and relief of legations
808
Corea
816
ClaytonBulwer treaty
836
American naturalization
842
Liberia
852
MODES OF REDRESS
857
Inviolability of Territory
871
Treaty of October 27 1795
883
Switzerland
890
Slave trade 310
897
Nonpolitical intervention
912
1 By contract
918
Early expressions of American policy
927
Piracy
930
Agents of the State 623
931
MonroeJeffersonMadison correspondence
933
The noncolonization principle
939
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