Hague Convention on Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters
Appearance
Signed | 1 February 1971 |
---|---|
Location | The Netherlands |
Effective | 20 August 1979 |
Condition | Ratification by 3 states |
Signatories | 3 |
Parties | 5 (as of 2013) Albania, Cyprus, Kuwait, Portugal and the Netherlands |
Depositary | Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Netherlands) |
Languages | English and French |
Full text | |
Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters at Wikisource |
The Hague Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters is a multilateral treaty governing the enforcement of judgments entered by one nation's legal authorities in other signatory nations. It is one of a number of conventions in the area of private international law of the Hague Conference on Private International Law in 1971.
States parties
[edit]Albania, Cyprus, Kuwait, Portugal and the Netherlands (Territory in Europe, Aruba and Curaçao) are parties to the convention.
External links
[edit]
Categories:
- Hague Conference on Private International Law conventions
- Treaties concluded in 1971
- Treaties entered into force in 1979
- Treaties of Albania
- Treaties of Cyprus
- Treaties of Kuwait
- Treaties of Portugal
- Treaties of the Netherlands
- 1971 in the Netherlands
- Treaties extended to Aruba
- Treaties extended to Curaçao
- 20th century in The Hague
- International law stubs
- Treaty stubs