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Pacific Islands Treaty Series |
CONVENTION ON CERTAIN QUESTIONS RELATING TO THE CONFLICT OF NATIONALITY LAWS
(The Hague, 12 April 1930)
ENTRY INTO FORCE: 1 JULY 1937, in accordance with articles 25 and 26
Depository: Secretariat of the League of Nations
PREAMBLE
CONSIDERING
that it is of importance to settle by international agreement questions relating
to the conflict of nationality
laws;
BEING
CONVINCED that it is
in the general interest of the international community to secure that all its
members should recognise that every person
should have a nationality and should
have one nationality only;
RECOGNISING
accordingly that the ideal towards which the efforts of humanity should be
directed in this domain is the abolition of all cases
both of statelessness and
of double nationality;
BEING
OF OPINION that,
under the economic and social conditions which at present exist in the various
countries, it is not possible to reach immediately
a uniform solution of all the
abovementioned problems;
BEING
DESIROUS,
nevertheless, as a first step toward this great achievement, of settling in a
first attempt at progressive codification, those questions
relating to the
conflict of nationality laws on which it is possible at the present time to
reach international agreement,
HAVE
DECIDED to conclude a
Convention and have for this purpose appointed as their Plenipotentiaries:
[Names of
plenipotentiaries not reproduced here.]
WHO,
having deposited their full powers found in good and due form,
HAVE
AGREED AS FOLLOWS:
CHAPTER I
GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Article 1
It is
for each State to determine under its own law who are its nationals. This law
shall be recognised by other States in so far
as it is consistent with
international conventions, international custom, and the principles of law
generally recognised with regard
to nationality.
Article 2
Any
question as to whether a person possesses the nationality of a particular State
shall be determined in accordance with the law
of that State.
Article 3
Subject
to the provisions of the present Convention, a person having two or more
nationalities may be regarded as its national by
each of the States whose
nationality he possesses.
Article 4
A
State may not afford diplomatic protection to one of its nationals against a
State whose nationality such person also possesses.
Article 5
Within
a third State, a person having more than one nationality shall be treated as if
he had only one. Without prejudice to the application
of its law in matters of
personal status and of any conventions in force, a third State shall, of the
nationalities which any such
person possesses, recognise exclusively in its
territory either the nationality of the country in which he is habitually and
principally
resident, or the nationality of the country with which in the
circumstances he appears to be in fact most closely connected.
Article 6
Without
prejudice to the liberty of a State to accord wider rights to renounce its
nationality, a person possessing two nationalities
acquired without any
voluntary act on his part may renounce one of them with the authorisation of the
State whose nationality he
desires to surrender.
This
authorisation may not be refused in the case of a person who has his habitual
and principal residence abroad, if the conditions
laid down in the law of the
State whose nationality he desires to surrender are satisfied.
CHAPTER II
EXPATRIATION PERMITS
Article 7
In so
far as the law of a State provides for the issue of an expatriation permit, such
a permit shall not entail the loss of the nationality
of the State which issues
it, unless the person to whom it is issued possesses another nationality or
unless and until he acquires
another nationality.
An
expatriation permit shall lapse if the holder does not acquire a new nationality
within the period fixed by the State which has
issued the permit. This provision
shall not apply in the case of an individual who, at the time when he receives
the expatriation
permit, already possesses a nationality other than that of the
State by which the permit is issued to him.
The State
whose nationality is acquired by a person to whom an expatriation permit has
been issued, shall notify such acquisition
to the State which has issued the
permit.
CHAPTER III
NATIONALITY OF MARRIED WOMEN
Article 8
If the
national law of the wife causes her to lose her nationality on marriage with a
foreigner, this consequence shall be conditional
on her acquiring the
nationality of the husband.
Article 9
If the
national law of the wife causes her to lose her nationality upon a change in the
nationality of her husband occurring during
marriage, this consequence shall be
conditional on her acquiring her husband's new nationality.
Article 10
Naturalisation
of the husband during marriage shall not involve a change in the nationality of
the wife except with her consent.
Article 11
The
wife who, under the law of her country, lost her nationality on marriage shall
not recover it after the dissolution of the marriage
except on her own
application and in accordance with the law of that country. If she does recover
it, she shall lose the nationality
which she acquired by reason of the marriage.
CHAPTER IV
NATIONALITY OF CHILDREN
Article 12
Rules
of law which confer nationality by reason of birth on the territory of a State
shall not apply automatically to children born
to persons enjoying diplomatic
immunities in the country where the birth occurs.
The law of
each State shall permit children of consuls de carrière, or of officials
of foreign States charged with official
missions by their Governments, to become
divested, by repudiation or otherwise, of the nationality of the State in which
they were
born, in any case in which on birth they acquired dual nationality,
provided that they retain the nationality of their parents.
Article 13
Naturalisation
of the parents shall confer on such of their children as, according to its law,
are minors the nationality of the State
by which the naturalisation is granted.
In such case the law of that State may specify the conditions governing the
acquisition of
its nationality by the minor children as a result of the
naturalisation of the parents. In cases where minor children do not acquire
the
nationality of their parents as the result of the naturalisation of the latter,
they shall retain their existing nationality.
Article 14
A
child whose parents are both unknown shall have the nationality of the country
of birth. If the child's parentage is established,
its nationality shall be
determined by the rules applicable in cases where the parentage is known.
A foundling
is, until the contrary is proved, presumed to have been born on the territory of
the State in which it was found.
Article 15
Where
the nationality of a State is not acquired automatically by reason of birth on
its territory, a child born on the territory
of that State of parents having no
nationality, or of unknown nationality, may obtain the nationality of the said
State. The law
of that State shall determine the conditions governing the
acquisition of its nationality in such cases.
Article 16
If the
law of the State, whose nationality an illegitimate child possesses, recognises
that such nationality may be lost as a consequence
of a change in the civil
status of the child (legitimation, recognition), such loss shall be conditional
on the acquisition by the
child of the nationality of another State under the
law of such State relating to the effect upon nationality of changes in civil
status.
CHAPTER V
ADOPTION
Article 17
If the
law of a State recognises that its nationality may be lost as the result of
adoption, this loss shall be conditional upon the
acquisition by the person
adopted of the nationality of the person by whom he is adopted, under the law of
the State of which the
latter is a national relating to the effect of adoption
upon nationality.
CHAPTER VI
GENERAL AND FINAL PROVISIONS
Article 18
The
High Contracting Parties agree to apply the principles and rules contained in
the preceding Articles in their relations with each
other, as from the date of
the entry into force of the present Convention.
The inclusion
of the abovementioned principles and rules in the Convention shall in no way be
deemed to prejudice the question whether
they do or do not already form part of
international law.
It is
understood that, in so far as any point is not covered by any of the provisions
of the preceding Articles, the existing principles
and rules of international
law shall remain in force.
Article 19
Nothing
in the present Convention shall affect the provisions of any treaty, convention
or agreement in force between any of the High
Contracting Parties relating to
nationality or matters connected therewith.
Article 20
Any
High Contracting Party may, when signing or ratifying the present Convention or
acceding thereto, append an express reservation
excluding any one or more of the
provisions of Articles 1 to 17 and 21.
The
provisions thus excluded cannot be applied against the Contracting Party who has
made the reservation nor relied on by that Party
against any other Contracting
Party.
Article 21
If
there should arise between the High Contracting Parties a dispute of any kind
relating to the interpretation or application of
the present Convention and if
such dispute cannot be satisfactorily settled by diplomacy, it shall be settled
in accordance with
any applicable agreements in force between the parties
providing for the settlement of international disputes.
In case there
is no such agreement in force between the parties, the dispute shall be referred
to arbitration or judicial settlement,
in accordance with the constitutional
procedure of each of the parties to the dispute. In the absence of agreement on
the choice
of another tribunal, the dispute shall be referred to the Permanent
Court of International Justice, if all the parties to the dispute
are parties to
the Protocol of 16 December 1920 relating to the Statute of that Court, and if
any of the parties to the dispute is
not a party to the Protocol of 16 December
1920, the dispute shall be referred to an arbitral tribunal constituted in
accordance
with the Hague Convention of 18 October 1907 for the Pacific
Settlement of International Conflicts.
Article 22
The
present Convention shall remain open until 31 December 1930 for signature on
behalf of any Member of the League of Nations or
of any non-Member State invited
to the First Codification Conference or to which the Council of the League of
Nations has communicated
a copy of the Convention for this purpose.
Article 23
The
present Convention is subject to ratification. Ratifications shall be deposited
with the Secretariat of the League of Nations.
The
Secretary-General shall give notice of the deposit of each ratification to the
Members of the League of Nations and to the non-Member
States mentioned in
Article 22, indicating the date of its deposit.
Article 24
As
from 1 January 1931, any Member of the League of Nations and any non-Member
State mentioned in Article 22 on whose behalf the Convention
has not been signed
before that date, may accede thereto.
Accession
shall be effected by an instrument deposited with the Secretariat of the League
of Nations. The Secretary-General of the
League of Nations shall give notice of
each accession to the Members of the League of Nations and to the non-Member
States mentioned
in Article 22, indicating the date of the deposit of the
instrument.
Article 25
A
procès-verbal shall be drawn up by the Secretary-General of the League of
Nations as soon as ratifications or accessions
on behalf of ten Members of the
League of Nations or non-Member States have been deposited.
A certified
copy of this procès-verbal shall be sent by the Secretary-General of the
League of Nations to each Member of the
League of Nations and to each non-Member
State mentioned in Article 22.
Article 26
The
present Convention shall enter into force on the 90th day after the date of the
procès-verbal mentioned in Article 25 as
regards all Members of the
League of Nations or non-Member States on whose behalf ratifications or
accessions have been deposited
on the date of the
procès-verbal.
As
regards any Member of the League or non-Member State on whose behalf a
ratification or accession is subsequently deposited, the
Convention shall enter
into force on the 90th day after the date of the deposit of a ratification or
accession on its behalf.
Article 27
As
from 1 January 1936, any Member of the League of Nations or any non-Member State
in regard to which the present Convention is then
in force, may address to the
Secretary-General of the League of Nations a request for the revision of any or
all of the provisions
of this Convention. If such a request, after being
communicated to the other Members of the League and non-Member States in regard
to which the Convention is then in force, is supported within one year by at
least nine of them, the Council of the League of Nations
shall decide, after
consultation with the Members of the League of Nations and the non-Member States
mentioned in Article 22, whether
a conference should be specially convoked for
that purpose or whether such revision should be considered at the next
conference for
the codification of international law.
The High
Contracting Parties agree that, if the present Convention is revised, the
revised Convention may provide that upon its entry
into force some or all of the
provisions of the present Convention shall be abrogated in respect of all of the
Parties to the present
Convention.
Article 28
The
present Convention may be denounced.
Denunciation
shall be effected by a notification in writing addressed to the
Secretary-General of the League of Nations, who shall
inform all Members of the
League of Nations and the non-Member States mentioned in Article 22.
Each
denunciation shall take effect one year after the receipt by the
Secretary-General of the notification but only as regards the
Member of the
League or non-Member State on whose behalf it has been notified.
Article 29
1. Any
High Contracting Party may, at the time of signature, ratification or accession,
declare that, in accepting the present Convention,
he does not assume any
obligations in respect of all or any of his colonies, protectorates, overseas
territories or territories under
suzerainty or mandate, or in respect of certain
parts of the population of the said territories; and the present Convention
shall
not apply to any territories or to the parts of their population named in
such declaration.
2. Any High
Contracting Party may give notice to the Secretary-General of the League of
Nations at any time subsequently that he desires
that the Convention shall apply
to all or any of his territories or to the parts of their population which have
been made the subject
of a declaration under the preceding paragraph, and the
Convention shall apply to all the territories or the parts of their population
named in such notice six months after its receipt by the Secretary-General of
the League of Nations.
3. Any High
Contracting Party may, at any time, declare that he desires that the present
Convention shall cease to apply to all or
any of his colonies, protectorates,
overseas territories or territories under suzerainty or mandate, or in respect
of certain parts
of the population of the said territories, and the Convention
shall cease to apply to the territories or to the parts of their population
named in such declaration one year after its receipt by the Secretary-General of
the League of Nations.
4. Any High
Contracting Party may make the reservations provided for in Article 20 in
respect of all or any of his colonies, protectorates,
overseas territories or
territories under suzerainty or mandate, or in respect of certain parts of the
population of these territories,
at the time of signature, ratification or
accession to the Convention or at the time of making a notification under the
second paragraph
of this Article.
5. The
Secretary-General of the League of Nations shall communicate to all the Members
of the League of Nations and the non-Member
States mentioned in Article 22 all
declarations and notices received in virtue of this Article.
Article 30
The
present Convention shall be registered by the Secretary-General of the League of
Nations as soon as it has entered into force.
Article 31
The
French and English texts of the present Convention shall both be authoritative.
IN
FAITH WHEREOF the
Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Convention.
DONE
at The Hague on the twelfth day of April, one thousand nine hundred and thirty,
in a single copy, which shall be deposited in the
archives of the Secretariat of
the League of Nations and of which certified true copies shall be transmitted by
the Secretary-General
to all the Members of the League of Nations and all the
non-Member States invited to the First Conference for the Codification of
International Law.
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