Act of state: Difference between revisions
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Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{a|contract|}}{{Act of state capsule}} {{sa}} *Sovereign immunity *Corporate veil *Force majeure" |
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*[[Sovereign immunity]] | *[[Sovereign immunity]] | ||
*[[Corporate veil]] | *[[Corporate veil]] | ||
*[[Force majeure]] | *[[Force majeure]], especially under the [[Force Majeure - ISDA Provision|ISDA master agreement]]. |
Latest revision as of 16:48, 14 January 2021
Now a state, rather like a corporation, is a juridical being — a fiction of the law — with no res extensa as such. It exists on the rarefied non-material plane of jurisprudence. There are, thus, only a certain number of things that, without the agency of one if its employees, a state can do, and these involve enacting and repealing laws, promulgating and withdrawing regulations, signing treaties, entering contracts and, where is has waived its sovereign immunity, litigating their meaning.
See also
- Sovereign immunity
- Corporate veil
- Force majeure, especially under the ISDA master agreement.