Hague Protection of Minors Convention

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Hague Protection of Minors Convention
Hague Convention concerning the powers of authorities and the law applicable in respect of the protection of infants
Drafted5 October 1961
LocationThe Hague
Effective4 February 1969
Condition3 ratifications
Ratifiers14
DepositaryMinistry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
LanguagesFrench

The Convention of 1961 Concerning the Powers of Authorities and the Law Applicable in Respect of the Protection of Infants, French: Convention du 5 octobre 1961 concernant la compétence des autorités et la loi applicable en matière de protection des mineurs, or Hague Protection of Minors Convention is a multilateral convention of the Hague Conference on Private International Law. The 1961 Convention emphasized the concept of the "interests of the child" as a basis for authorities of the child's nationality to overrule the authorities of the child's habitual residence. It built upon prior efforts to create successful multilateral treaties and brought an innovation in terminology by creating a compromise between advocates of "nationality" as the determining factor for jurisdiction and advocates for the modern fact-centric model of "habitual residence." The convention also included expanded language to encompass both judicial and administrative authorities in response to the Boll case (regarding the Hague Convention of 1902 relating to the settlement of guardianship of minors). Of particularly special note, the drafters of the 1961 Convention expressly considered a provision addressing the removal of a child from their habitual residence with an intent to evade rightful jurisdiction—primarily for child custody reasons. This first attempt to codify international child abduction failed due to an inability to agree on a definition or manner of describing the phenomenon, with a number of countries that adhered to the principle of nationality regulating personal child and family law unable to classify their nationals removing children from foreign countries to their home state as illegal.[1]

Contracting States

As of 2013, 14 states are parties to the convention, of which 13 are located in Europe.

External links

References

  1. ^ "The Internationalization of Family Law" (PDF). US Davis Law Review. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-13. Retrieved 2010-08-08. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)