| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - International law - 1946 - 192 pages
...choice. The most important exclusion here, it seems to me, is covered in b — that such declaration shall not apply to disputes with regard to matters...essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the United States. When the Morse resolution was introduced originally it provided for the exclusion of matters... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Foreign Relations - 1946 - 202 pages
...choice. The most important exclusion here, it seems to me, is covered hi b — that such declaration shall not apply to disputes with regard to matters...essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the United States. When the Morse resolution was introduced originally it provided for the exclusion of matters... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - United States - 1950 - 1414 pages
...tribunals by virtue of agreements already in existence or which may be concluded in the future ; b. nd that all the territories Japan has stolen from...Manchuria, Formosa, and the Pescadores, shall be ; or c. disputes arising under a multilateral treaty, unless (1) all parties to the treaty affected... | |
| United States. Department of State. Office of Public Affairs - 1950 - 270 pages
...tribunals by virtue of agreements already in existence or which may be concluded in the future; or b. disputes with regard to matters which are essentially within the domestic Jurisdiction of the United States of America as determined by the United States of America; or c. disputes arising under a multilateral... | |
| United States - 1959 - 1916 pages
...the Senate with bipartisan support contained a reservation excluding from the Court's jurisdiction "disputes with regard to matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the United States." Public hearings were conducted on the resolution in this form,8 and it was unanimously endorsed... | |
| 1952 - 542 pages
...The reservation of the United States removes from the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court: 13 ... disputes with regard to matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the United States of America as determined by the United States of America. The effect of this reservation is... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1953 - 1218 pages
...which the Connally reservation was attached nrovldlncr that it "shall not apply to dispute* with reeard to matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of the United States as dftermined by the United Stairs." [Emphasis added. 1 "The pros and cons of this suetrested treaty are... | |
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