Hand-book of International Law

Front Cover
West Publishing Company, 1895 - International law - 478 pages
 

Contents

Union of States
20
Real Union
21
Federal or Centralized State
22
Protected StatesStates under Suzerainty 2425
24
Neutralized States
25
De Facto StatesBelligerency 2627
26
Right of Belligerent States to Demand Recognition 2728
27
When Recognition of Belligerency Permissible 2830
28
Effect of Recognition of Belligerency
31
CHAPTER II
33
CHAPTER III
45
CHAPTER IV
64
51
70
6265 Extraterritorial Acts of Persons by Direction of Their State 8183
81
Responsibility of a State in Case of Civil Commotion and Mob Violence 8385
83
Extradition of Fugitives from Justice 8586
85
Political Offenses 8687
86
Extradition of Its Own Citizens by a State 8788
87
Jurisdiction of Offenses beyond the Limits of the State 8890
88
6465
90
CHAPTER V
91
7374 Piracy 97101
97
Rebels and Insurgents as Pirates 101103
101
Letters of MarquePrivateers 103104
103
The Slave Trade as Piracy
104
CHAPTER VI
105
Refusal to Receive Diplomatic Agent 106107
106
Commencement of Mission
108
Termination of Mission 109111
109
Rights of Diplomatic Agents in Third States 112114
112
8586 Consuls
115
Appointment 116117
116
Dismissal 117118
117
Privileges 118119
118
CHAPTER VII
120
CHAPTER IX
139
CHAPTER X
155
120
161
CHAPTER XII
176
Maritime
184
CHAPTER XIII
192
Foraging
198
What Constitutes a Valid Capture 203204
203
Disposition of Captured Property
205
Ransom 206207
206
Loss of Captured Property 207208
207
CHAPTER XIV
209
Limitations upon the Rights of Postliminium 210211
210
Acts in Excess of Legal Powers 211212
211
Effect of Expulsion of the Enemy by a Power not an Ally 212213
212
Recapture
213
Salvage
214
Rescue by Neutrals
215
CHAPTER XV
216
Extent of the Rights of Military Occupation 218219
218
The Beginning of Occupation 219220
219
Employment of Balloons
231
ENEMY CHARACTER Section Page 184 To Whom Attributed 232233
232
Domicile 233234
233
Change of Domicile
235
House of Trade 236237
236
Enemy Character as to Property
237
Transfer of Property in War or in Anticipation of War
238
Transfers in Transitu 239240
239
Goods Consigned from Belligerent Ports by Belligerents to Neutrals and Vice Versa 240241
240
Effect of Occupation by the Enemy of Territory of Other Belligerent
242
CHAPTER XVIII
243
Flags of Truce
244
197198 Passports and SafeConducts
245
Commencement of a Truce or Armistice
248
Cartels
249
Capitulations
250
Safeguards
251
CHAPTER XIX
254
By a Simple Cessation of Hostilities
256
Effect of a Proclamation of the Executive in a Civil War
257
The Principle of Uti Possidetis
258
CHAPTER XX
267
Armed Neutrality
273
Sales of Munitions of War etc by a Neutral State
279
Fitting Out Hostile Expeditions in Neutral Territory
293
CHAPTER XXII
298
Captured Vessel Converted into Public Vessel of Belligerent
301
Arms and Munitions of War
302
Articles for Manufacture of Same and Equipments 303306
303
245246 Penalty for Carrying Contraband 307308
307
Preemption
308
249250 The Carriage of Dispatches 309310
309
Carriage of Persons
310
Penalty for Carrying Hostile Persons and Papers 311312
311
Carriage of Same in Ordinary Course of Business 312314
312
CHAPTER XXIII
315
Places That can be Blockaded
316
Notification of Blockade 317318
317
What Constitutes a Valid Blockade 318319
318
When a Blockade Ceases 319320
319
260261 Effect of Blockade upon Vessels in the Blockaded Port 320321
320
What is a Breach of Blockade
322
Penalty for Breach of Blockade
323
Blockade of a River Partly in Neutral Territory
324
Continuous Voyages 326327
326
CHAPTER XXIV
328
Who can Visit
329
Formalities in Exercising the Right of Search 331332
331
When a Vessel may be Captured 332334
332
Spoliation of Papers
334
APPENDIX
339
Papers Carried by Vessels in Evidence of their Nationality and other
365
The Declaration of Paris 371372
371
The Brussels Conference 389412
389
294
417
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