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International Law

Michigan Law Review

Citizenship

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Full-Text Articles in Law

International Law-Reservations To Commercial Treaties Dealing With Aliens' Plights To Engage In The Professions, Alan Reeve Hunt S.Ed. Jun 1954

International Law-Reservations To Commercial Treaties Dealing With Aliens' Plights To Engage In The Professions, Alan Reeve Hunt S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

The question of how far an alien may engage in a profession despite state requirements of citizenship which attach to many professions has not been widely litigated or discussed in this country. Recent action by the United States Senate, however, has created interest in problems presented by commercial treaty provisions which guarantee to alien nationals of many countries the right to engage in professions. Attention has thus been focused on law and policy questions which were formerly of little concern outside of the State Department. On July 21, 1953 the Senate gave its advice and consent to the ratification of …


The Legal Status Of Occupied Germany, Max Rheinstein Nov 1948

The Legal Status Of Occupied Germany, Max Rheinstein

Michigan Law Review

The unprecedented situation presently existing in Germany has, of necessity, given rise to new and intricate questions of international law. Of these, one set of problems appears to me to deserve special attention because of both their theoretical and practical significance, namely, the problems concerning the legal relations between Germany and .her occupiers.


International Law Problems In The Extradition Of Samuel Insull Feb 1933

International Law Problems In The Extradition Of Samuel Insull

Michigan Law Review

Considerable interest was aroused by the press announcement of October 4, 1932, that Samuel Insull, former utilities magnate, had been indicted by an Illinois grand jury on charges of embezzlement and larceny and that his extradition from France, where he was then sojourning, would be requested. The seventy-four year old fugitive displayed unusual vigor in surreptitiously leaving Paris by train for Italy, where he boarded an airplane for Greece. He arrived in Athens on October 9, 1932, just one day after the request for his extradition reached Paris. On the following day he was arrested by the Greek authorities on …