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Recognition in Contemporary Inter-American Relations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Donald Marquand Dozer*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of California, Santa Barbara

Extract

In the Broadest historical and technical sense recognition in international relations refers to the acknowledgment by a nation of any change in a situation in a foreign country. The authority to extend recognition is an attribute of sovereignty by which a nation, government, or people fixes its relations with other nations, governments, and peoples, thus establishing or reestablishing a legal continuity which has, for one reason or another, been broken. Decisions on recognition are usually restricted to the recognition of new states, the recognition of belligerency or insurgency, and the recognition of new governments. They involve such questions as the following: When does a state acquire juridical personality and become entitled to enjoy the rights and incur the obligations of a state under international law? What cognizance can or should governments take of the domestic situation within another state? When does a new government begin to function formally in international relations?

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1966

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References

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