The principle of immunity of state and their property from foreign state courts is a natural consequence of the adoption of the principle of equal sovereignty of states in the International law and the international community. The principle, except with the consent of a state and outside the exceptions generally accepted in international practice, prevents domestic courts to exercise jurisdiction over a foreign state or their property. However, some countries contrary to the exceptions have taken some steps to violate the principle of state immunity through legislative and judicial measures. In this regard, the Iranian government has been the subject of numerous lawsuits in Federal courts of the United States through which it has been sente...
One of the key problems in the judicial consideration of compensation claims for damage caused to th...
The immunity systems in international law commonly encompass the concept of jurisdictional immunity,...
This article explores the tension between the foreign state immunity doctrine and the right to court...
The principle of immunity of state and their property from foreign state courts is a natural consequ...
The jurisdiction of a court refers to its capacity in order to take valid legal actions. The first o...
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act contains a number of “exceptions” to state immunity that are un...
When an American citizen is injured in a terrorist attack on foreign soil, the victim has a limited ...
On May 1, 1951, Iranian legislation enacting the so-called nationalization of the oil industry in Ir...
In this article principle of sovereign judicial immunity, developments and changes on this principle...
Attribution of private-person’s act to a state is accepted in international law in some exceptional...
The U.S. Supreme Court decided in Samantar v. Yousuf that claims of immunity by individual foreign o...
International law: state immunity and the controversy of private suits against soverign states in do...
This Note will propose the constitutional framework courts should implement when suits are brought a...
On June 14, 2016, Iran submitted an application to the International Court of Justice against the Un...
The rule of State immunity occupies a special place in international law, since it belongs to a narr...
One of the key problems in the judicial consideration of compensation claims for damage caused to th...
The immunity systems in international law commonly encompass the concept of jurisdictional immunity,...
This article explores the tension between the foreign state immunity doctrine and the right to court...
The principle of immunity of state and their property from foreign state courts is a natural consequ...
The jurisdiction of a court refers to its capacity in order to take valid legal actions. The first o...
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act contains a number of “exceptions” to state immunity that are un...
When an American citizen is injured in a terrorist attack on foreign soil, the victim has a limited ...
On May 1, 1951, Iranian legislation enacting the so-called nationalization of the oil industry in Ir...
In this article principle of sovereign judicial immunity, developments and changes on this principle...
Attribution of private-person’s act to a state is accepted in international law in some exceptional...
The U.S. Supreme Court decided in Samantar v. Yousuf that claims of immunity by individual foreign o...
International law: state immunity and the controversy of private suits against soverign states in do...
This Note will propose the constitutional framework courts should implement when suits are brought a...
On June 14, 2016, Iran submitted an application to the International Court of Justice against the Un...
The rule of State immunity occupies a special place in international law, since it belongs to a narr...
One of the key problems in the judicial consideration of compensation claims for damage caused to th...
The immunity systems in international law commonly encompass the concept of jurisdictional immunity,...
This article explores the tension between the foreign state immunity doctrine and the right to court...