A litigant who sues a state trading corporation for eight years through two trials, four appeals, and three certiorari denials, and then finally wins a judgment for $411,203.72, but is unable to collect on his judgment, might feel a little discouraged about the fairness of a principle of law that denies him a right to recovery. The principle is sovereign immunity; a sovereign state and its property, without its consent, are immune from the adjudicative processes of the courts in another sovereign state. In traditional international law, it does not matter what kind of activity the state is engaged in; the mere fact that it is a sovereign state entitles it to immunity regardless of what it does
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
In 1952 plaintiff brought a creditor\u27s action for the appointment of a permanent receiver for the...
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) grants state status, and therefore sovereign immunity, t...
The morass of recent Supreme Court state sovereign immunity jurisprudence is closely examined. Rathe...
Under the concept of sovereign or governmental immunity, a state may not be sued in tort without its...
Some interesting illustrations in the field of state immunity have been afforded by the litigation a...
A state of the Union may preserve its immunity from suit in its own courts, and the Constitution res...
States should be treated as market participants and not be given sovereign immunity under the Eleven...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity\u27 prohibits the courts from assuming jurisdiction of a foreign ...
When a legal dispute involving a foreign nation is submitted to a United States court, the adjudicat...
This Article analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s recent decisions involving the act of state doctrine. T...
Sovereign Immunity and Act of State -- A Foreign Sovereign instituting Suit in a United States Court...
First, this article will examine the way courts have dealt with suits against FGOCs claiming immunit...
In 1953 the government of Peru authorized the issuance of scrip certificates to holders of certain o...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
In 1952 plaintiff brought a creditor\u27s action for the appointment of a permanent receiver for the...
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) grants state status, and therefore sovereign immunity, t...
The morass of recent Supreme Court state sovereign immunity jurisprudence is closely examined. Rathe...
Under the concept of sovereign or governmental immunity, a state may not be sued in tort without its...
Some interesting illustrations in the field of state immunity have been afforded by the litigation a...
A state of the Union may preserve its immunity from suit in its own courts, and the Constitution res...
States should be treated as market participants and not be given sovereign immunity under the Eleven...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity\u27 prohibits the courts from assuming jurisdiction of a foreign ...
When a legal dispute involving a foreign nation is submitted to a United States court, the adjudicat...
This Article analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s recent decisions involving the act of state doctrine. T...
Sovereign Immunity and Act of State -- A Foreign Sovereign instituting Suit in a United States Court...
First, this article will examine the way courts have dealt with suits against FGOCs claiming immunit...
In 1953 the government of Peru authorized the issuance of scrip certificates to holders of certain o...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
In 1952 plaintiff brought a creditor\u27s action for the appointment of a permanent receiver for the...
The Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) grants state status, and therefore sovereign immunity, t...