Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • Inviolability guarantees the sanctity of diplomatic and consular premises. Whilst it does not place premises above the law, anybody who remains on diplomatic or consular premises can take refuge from the law.
      newsite.diplomaticlawguide.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/DiplomaticLaw.pdf
  1. People also ask

  2. Mar 25, 2023 · The need for the rule of inviolability is so important in the concept of diplomatic relations without which there would be chaos in the relationship between states. However, the principle of...

    • Login

      The need for the rule of inviolability is so important in...

    • Help Center

      © 2008-2024 ResearchGate GmbH. All rights reserved. Terms;...

  3. The personal inviolability accorded to envoys, for example among the ancient Greek cities and among the states of ancient India, became of less importance with the rise of the Roman Empire and...

  4. Inviolability guarantees the sanctity of diplomatic and consular premises. Whilst it does not place premises above the law, anybody who remains on diplomatic or consular premises can take refuge from the law.

    • 113KB
    • 12
  5. Oct 17, 2017 · Following on the above, the passage of the English Diplomatic Privileges Act of 1708 was an important historical moment given its general contribution to the development of rules relating to the granting of diplomatic privileges and immunities, including on the basis of the theory of functional necessity. 61 The Act is generally hailed as one ...

    • S. R. Subramanian
    • 2017
    • Why is the rule of inviolability important?1
    • Why is the rule of inviolability important?2
    • Why is the rule of inviolability important?3
    • Why is the rule of inviolability important?4
    • Why is the rule of inviolability important?5
  6. One of the most difficult and widely discussed questions in recent moral theory is that of the status of human rights—the rights of individuals not to be violated, sacrificed, or used in certain ways, even in the service of valuable ends, either by other individuals or by governments and intermediate institutions.

  7. 1 The inviolability of diplomatic agents is one of the oldest rules of international law. Already thousands of years ago, in the practice of, for example, the Greek and the Romans, a diplomatic agent—then called a messenger or herald—was not to be maltreated or subjected to any form of arrest or detention.

  8. The need for the rule of inviolability is so important in the concept of diplomatic relations without which there would be chaos in relationship between states. However, the principle of inviolability has sometimes led to a breakdown in the rule of law when it is used as a tool to evade prosecution in order to attain diplomatic impunity.