Congressional Research Service epub International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports)

ZIP 7.5 Mb
RAR 7.8 Mb
EXE 8.2 Mb
APK 9.4 Mb
IOS 7.4 Mb
International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports)

Congressional Research Service yazarının International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports) kitabı da dahil olmak üzere birçok dosya aşağıdaki bölümleri de içerebilir:
- imza dosyası: çeşitli varlıklar için dijital imzalar içerir.
- şifreleme.xml: yayımlama kaynaklarının şifrelenmesiyle ilgili bilgileri içerir. (Yazı tipi gizleme kullanılıyorsa bu dosya gereklidir.)
- meta veriler: kapsayıcı hakkında meta verileri depolamak için kullanılır.
- haklar: International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports) kitabının dijital haklarıyla ilgili bilgileri depolamak için kullanılır.

XHTML içerik belgeleri ayrıca zengin meta verilerle International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports) kitap işaretlemesine açıklama ekleme olanakları içerir, bu da onları hem işleme hem de erişilebilirlik amaçları için anlamsal olarak daha anlamlı ve kullanışlı hale getirir.

E içerik belgeleri, bir yayının okunabilir içeriğini tanımlayan ve ilgili medya varlıklarına (görüntüler, ses ve video klipler gibi) bağlantı veren XHTML (HTML5 profili tarafından tanımlanır) veya SVG belgeleri vb.'dir.


Biçim seçin
pdf kindle doc

HardPress Publishing 1 x 13,5 x 21 cm 28 Şubat 2018 1 Eylül 2020 Kolektif 31 Ağustos 2012 20,3 x 0,6 x 25,4 cm Collectif United States Congress Icon Group International 3 Ocak 2017 Babadada Gmbh 14.81 x 0.48 x 21.01 cm 21,6 x 0,2 x 27,9 cm 17.78 x 0.61 x 25.4 cm 4 Ocak 2017 21,6 x 0,6 x 27,9 cm 5 Ocak 2017
okumak okumak kayıt olmadan
yazar International Law and Agreements: Their Effect upon U.S. Law (CRS Reports) Congressional Research Service

This report provides an introduction to the roles that international law and agreements play in the United States. International law is derived from two primary sources—international agreements and customary practice. Under the U.S. legal system, international agreements can be entered into by means of a treaty or an executive agreement. The Constitution allocates primary responsibility for entering into such agreements to the executive branch, but Congress also plays an essential role. First, in order for a treaty (but not an executive agreement) to become binding upon the United States, the Senate must provide its advice and consent to treaty ratification by a two-thirds majority. Secondly, Congress may authorize congressional-executive agreements. Thirdly, many treaties and executive agreements are not self-executing, meaning that implementing legislation is required to provide U.S. bodies with the domestic legal authority necessary to enforce and comply with an international agreement’s provisions. The status of an international agreement within the United States depends on a variety of factors. Self-executing treaties have a status equal to federal statute, superior to U.S. state law, and inferior to the Constitution. Depending upon the nature of executive agreements, they may or may not have a status equal to federal statute. In any case, self-executing executive agreements have a status that is superior to U.S. state law and inferior to the Constitution. Treaties or executive agreements that are not self-executing generally have been understood by the courts to have limited status domestically; rather, the legislation or regulations implementing these agreements are controlling. The effects of the second source of international law, customary international practice, upon the United States are more ambiguous and controversial. While there is some Supreme Court jurisprudence finding that customary international law is part of U.S. law, U.S. statutes that conflict with customary rules remain controlling. Customary international law is perhaps most clearly recognized under U.S. law via the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), which establishes federal court jurisdiction over tort claims brought by aliens for violations of “the law of nations.” Recently, there has been some controversy concerning references made by U.S. courts to foreign laws or jurisprudence when interpreting domestic statutes or constitutional requirements. Historically, U.S. courts have on occasion looked to foreign jurisprudence for persuasive value, particularly when the interpretation of an international agreement is at issue, but foreign jurisprudence never appears to have been treated as binding. Though U.S. courts will likely continue to refer to foreign jurisprudence, where, when, and how significantly they will rely upon it is difficult to predict.

En son kitaplar

benzer kitaplar

Brazil: Political and Economic Situation and U.S. Relations (CRS Reports)


okumak kayıt olmadan
The U.S.-EU Beef Hormone Dispute


okumak kayıt olmadan
U.S.-UK Free Trade Agreement: Prospects and Issues for Congress


okumak kayıt olmadan
Jordan: Background and U.S. Relations


okumak kayıt olmadan
Jordan: Background and U.S. Relations


okumak kayıt olmadan
U.S.-China Military Contacts: Issues for Congress (CRS Reports)


okumak kayıt olmadan