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How do these alternatives operate on the domestic jurisdiction matter?
There may be tax benefits as a result of choosing where a corporation's domestic jurisdiction is located.
"It's a joint operation, which is why technically they do have domestic jurisdiction.
"The framework of domestic jurisdiction has narrowed," he said.
Article 2 of the Charter is clear about nonintervention "in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state."
For example, India excludes matters within its "domestic jurisdiction" and concerning its territorial boundaries.
Not only are its resources limited, the Charter explicitly prohibits it from intervening in matters essentially in the domestic jurisdiction of a state.
The claimant applying for the payment of foreign currency must show reasons for it based on losses suffered outside the domestic jurisdiction.
Mr. Kissinger, a friend and dieting role model, wrote recently that the "events" in Beijing were within China's domestic jurisdiction.
This principle also includes the handling of war crime cases that are referred back to domestic jurisdiction by the ICTY.
Mr. Kissinger objected to U.S. sanctions against any "major country" for "events entirely within its domestic jurisdiction."
During the occupation, American military personnel were exempt from domestic jurisdiction since Okinawa was an occupied territory of the United States.
He said the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe had already gone very far, at least on paper, in rejecting the argument of domestic jurisdiction.
The United Nations is no help; it forswears intervention in matters of "domestic jurisdiction" even as it sponsors a "universal declaration of human rights."
He further suggested that to permit review of a visitor's decision for error of law would not impair the effectiveness of the visitor's domestic jurisdiction.
He was subsequently awarded a D.Litt by the University of Mysore in 1963 for his book, United Nations and Domestic Jurisdiction.
The Judicial Committee's domestic jurisdiction was very limited, hearing only cases on the competency of the devolved legislatures in Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales.
Those processes are "matters . . . essentially within the domestic jurisdiction" of the United States (Article 2, 7), beyond the purview of the Security Council.
On the other hand they did not have domestic jurisdiction, particularly not when the President had turned it over to J. Edgar Hoover and said, "Ed, you handle this.
The two Covenants form treaty law, that is international human rights law, and ratifying parties (nation states) to the Covenant commit themselves to implement the contained rights in their domestic jurisdictions.
Appearing personally before the United Nations General Assembly, Smuts defended the policies of his government by fervently pleading that India's complaint was a matter of domestic jurisdiction.
But Mr. Turk of Slovenia, the chairman of a working committee on rights in the General Assembly, said the words "essentially within domestic jurisdiction" were chosen carefully and are elastic.
By intervening within the domestic jurisdiction of a state for the purpose of humanitarian relief and the maintenance of international peace and security, the United Nations would be violating the sacrosanct principle of sovereignty.
The relevant language, in Article 2 (7), says, "Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state."
But at first the United Nations Charter seemed to make such intervention legally difficult by outlawing war unless declared by the Security Council and banning outside interference in matters "essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state."