Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
International Registered Mail is insured for up to either 2 000 SEK or 10 000 SEK. [ 11 ] There is an optional added service called Personal Delivery (Swedish: Personlig utlämning ) where only the recipient can collect the letter and denies all else, including couriers and power of attorney .
Signed treaties enter into force only if ratified by at least two-thirds (67 members) of the United States Senate. (Technically, the Senate itself does not ratify treaties, it only approves or rejects resolutions of ratification submitted by the Committee on Foreign Relations ; if approved, the United States exchanges the instruments of ...
The service includes neither tracking nor insurance; [5] but it may be possible to purchase shipping insurance from a third-party company. USPS Commercial ePacket. The service is trackable. Ordinary first-class international airmail. Senders can access the International Surface Air Lift and ePacket services through postal wholesalers.
The United States Postal Service (USPS) provides Priority Mail Express [1] for domestic U.S. delivery, and offers two types of international Express Mail services, although only one of them is part of the EMS standard. One is called Priority Mail Express International [2] and the other service is called Global Express Guaranteed (GXG). [3]
Hellner, Jan, 'The UN Convention on International Sales of Goods – An Outsider's View' in Erik Jayme (ed) Ius Inter Nationes: Festschrift fur Stefan Riesenfeld (1983) 72. Kastely, Amy, 'Unification and Community: A Rhetorical Analysis of the United Nations Sales Convention' (1988) 8 Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business 574.
1776 – Model Treaty passed by the Continental Congress becomes the template for its future international treaties [6] 1776 – Treaty of Watertown – a military treaty between the newly formed United States and the St. John's and Mi'kmaq First Nations of Nova Scotia, two peoples of the Wabanaki Confederacy.
The aircraft Protocol (officially: Protocol to the Convention on International Interests in Mobile Equipment on matters specific to aircraft equipment) was signed immediately with the treaty and the only protocol currently entered into force. It applies to aircraft which can carry at least eight people or 2750 kilograms of cargo, aircraft ...
Originally signed in 1929 in Warsaw (hence the name), it was amended in 1955 at The Hague, Netherlands, and in 1971 in Guatemala City, Guatemala. [2] United States courts have held that, at least for some purposes, the Warsaw Convention is a different instrument from the Warsaw Convention as amended by the Hague Protocol .