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Basic Elements of Diplomatic Protection of Citizens Abroad*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2017
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The diplomatic protection of citizens abroad is a comparatively modern phenomenon in the evolution of the state, in constitutional and in international law. Not until the legal position of the state toward individuals, both its own citizens and aliens, and of states between themselves, had become clearly denned in modern public law, did diplomatic protection become a factor in international intercourse. A discussion of the subject therefore involves a preliminary study of three distinct legal relations, first, between the state and its own citizen; secondly, between the state and aliens resident within it; and, lastly, the relations of states among themselves with respect to their rights over and their international responsibility for delinquencies toward aliens.
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References
1 The growth of the state and of modern political society can not be here discussed. The subject is ably treated by Professor Edward Jenks in his History of Politics, London, New York, 1900, and in his Law and Politics in the Middle Ages, London, 1898.
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28 For the history of natural rights and the modern theories see Ritchie, D. G., Natural rights, London, 1895, ch. 1 and 2. An analysis of the so–called rights is undertaken by Ritchie, ch. 6 et seq.
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32 There had been a definite declaration of rights in Virginia in 1776, and the preamble and first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776 was in the nature of a declaration of rights. These documents with the French Declaration des droits de l’homme et du citoyen of 1789, as prefixed, with amendments, to several French constitutions, are to be found in the appendix to Ritchie, op. cit. See also the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution.
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43 Wittman, Ernö, Double imposts, in 24th Report of the International Law Association (at Portland), London, 1908, pp. 214-229; Bar, op. cit., p. 245 et seq.
44 Germany, by the law of July 1, 1870, Art. 20, reserves the right to punish with denationalization the failure to heed the summons to return. Art. 22 provides the same penalty for those who, having entered the service of a foreign state do not, on demand, resign their office. The Hungarian law of Dec. 20, 1879 (Art. 50, Annuaire de legislation etrangere, 1880, p. 351) makes a similar provision. See also French civil code, Art. 17, sec. 4, as amended by law of June 26, 1889 and Art. 17, sec. 3. See also Chretien, Principes de droit international public, Paris, 1893, p. 218.
45 An exhaustive comparative study of the subject of extraterritorial crime with extracts from the statutes of the more important countries and quotations from the writings of publicists is to be found in John Bassett Moore’s Report on extraterritorial crime and the Cutting case, Washington, 1887, 129 p. See also Chretien, op. cit., p. 221.
46 Stoerk in Holtzendorff’s Handbuch, v. 2, p. 631; Chrétien, op. cit., p. 218; Law of Costa Rica, Dec. 20, 1886, Art. 4, Annuaire de législation étrangère, 1887, p. 869.
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