Hague Guardianship Convention

For other Hague conventions, see Hague Convention.
Hague Convention of 1902 relating to the settlement of guardianship of minors
Drafted 12 June 1902
Location The Hague
Effective 30 July 1904
Parties 7 (Belgium, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Romania and Spain)
Depositary Government of the Netherlands
Language French

Commonly referred to as the "Guardianship Convention", the Convention of 1902 relating to the settlement of guardianship of minors, along with the other Conventions in 1902, was the Hague Conference's first effort at addressing international family law. Within a few decades it was the only family law Convention to retain any currency. It was also the only family law treaty that was expressly preserved and revived in the Treaty of Versailles and other post World War I peace treaties. The Guardianship Convention was written only in French and, with the Boll case, is the only Convention of the Hague Conference to ever be the principal subject of interpretation before a court with worldwide jurisdiction.

Parties

As of 2016, seven states are party to the convention: Belgium, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Romania and Spain. Six others: France, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland have denounced the convention.

Other Conventions of 1902

References

    External links

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