Estrada Doctrine

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According to the Estrada doctrine , any (non-) recognition of a government is an illegal interference in the internal affairs of a foreign state. It goes back to Genaro Estrada Félix (1887–1937), who was Mexico's foreign minister from 1930–1932 and who formulated it in 1930.

In this respect, the Estrada Doctrine calls for the government to abstain from any recognition; it is thus the alternative to the so-called Tobar doctrine .

reception

Bernd Loudwin wrote in 1983, referring to two sources: "Just like the Tobar Doctrine, which did not gain acceptance, the Estrada Doctrine remained essentially limited to a historical-political role."

Web links

  • Georg Dahm , Jost Delbrück , Rüdiger Wolfrum : Völkerrecht , Volume 1, Part 1. 2. Edition 1988, de Gruyter. (At that time Delbrück and Dahm were directors of the Institute for International Law at the University of Kiel; p. 198 )

See also

swell

  1. The implied recognition in international law , page 58