Insular Cases
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Insular_Cases an entity of type: WikicatSubdivisionsOfTheUnitedStates
도서 판례(Insular Cases)는 1901년 미국이 미국-스페인 전쟁에서 승리하고 얻은 새로운 영토의 지위에 대해 미국 연방 대법원이 판결한 내용들을 말한다. 즉, 미국이 새로 획득한 영토의 거주민들이 미국 시민권을 가지고 있는지에 대한 연방 대법원의 입장을 정리한 판결들의 통칭이다. 이에 대해 연방 대법원은 미국 헌법에 의한 권리 보호는 미국의 통제 하에 있는 모든 지역으로 자동적으로 확장되지는 않는다고 선언하여 푸에르토리코와 같은 지역의 거주민들은 헌법상의 권리가 결여되어 있다고 해석했다.
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Unter dem Titel Insular Cases fasst man mehrere Entscheidungen des US Supreme Court aus dem frühen 20. Jahrhundert zusammen. Die Fälle bezogen sich im Wesentlichen auf ein zentrales Thema der Präsidentschaftswahl 1900 und der American Anti-Imperialist League, das in folgender Frage zum Ausdruck kommt: „Folgt die Verfassung der Flagge?“ (“Does the Constitution follow the flag?”). Der Supreme Court entschied, dass die vollständigen Rechte der Verfassung nicht automatisch auf alle Gebiete unter amerikanischer Kontrolle ausgedehnt werden können.
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Los Casos Insulares son casos decididos por la Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos a principios del siglo XX. A partir del 1901, dicho Tribunal decidió más de una decena de controversias relacionadas con las leyes orgánicas que el Congreso de los Estados Unidos promulgó para los territorios que esa nación había adquirido (Hawái, Filipinas, Guam, y Puerto Rico).
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The Insular Cases are a series of opinions by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1901 about the status of U.S. territories acquired in the Spanish–American War. Some scholars also include cases regarding territorial status decided up until 1914, and others include related cases as late as 1979.
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Insular Cases
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Casos insulares
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Insular Cases
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도서 판례
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547930
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Unter dem Titel Insular Cases fasst man mehrere Entscheidungen des US Supreme Court aus dem frühen 20. Jahrhundert zusammen. Die Fälle bezogen sich im Wesentlichen auf ein zentrales Thema der Präsidentschaftswahl 1900 und der American Anti-Imperialist League, das in folgender Frage zum Ausdruck kommt: „Folgt die Verfassung der Flagge?“ (“Does the Constitution follow the flag?”). Der Supreme Court entschied, dass die vollständigen Rechte der Verfassung nicht automatisch auf alle Gebiete unter amerikanischer Kontrolle ausgedehnt werden können. 1898 annektierten die USA Hawaii. Im gleichen Jahr beendete der Pariser Frieden den Spanisch-Amerikanischen Krieg, woraufhin die USA in den Besitz von Kuba, Puerto Rico, Guam und den Philippinen kamen. Zu dieser Zeit gab es eine Debatte über die Regierung in diesen neuen Territorien, da es zu diesem Thema keine Regeln in der Verfassung gab. Mit den Insular Cases lieferte der Supreme Court die Rahmenbedingungen für die Anwendung der Verfassung auf diesen Inseln.
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The Insular Cases are a series of opinions by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1901 about the status of U.S. territories acquired in the Spanish–American War. Some scholars also include cases regarding territorial status decided up until 1914, and others include related cases as late as 1979. When the war ended in 1898, the United States had to answer the question of whether or not people in newly acquired territories were citizens, a question the country had never faced before. The preliminary answer came from a series of Supreme Court rulings, now known as the Insular Cases, which responded to the question of how American constitutional rights apply to those in United States territories. The Supreme Court held that full constitutional protection of rights does not automatically (or ex proprio vigore—i.e., of its own force) extend to all places under American control. This meant that inhabitants of unincorporated territories such as Puerto Rico—"even if they are U.S. citizens"—may lack some constitutional rights (e.g., the right to remain part of the United States in case of de-annexation) because they were not part of the United States. Today, many legal scholars refer to the Insular Cases as a constitutional justification for colonialism and annexation of places not within United States boundaries. The Insular Cases "authorized the colonial regime created by Congress, which allowed the United States to continue its administration—and exploitation—of the territories acquired from Spain after the Spanish–American War." These Supreme Court rulings allowed for the United States government to extend unilateral power over these newly acquired territories. The Court also established the doctrine of territorial incorporation, under which the Constitution applied fully only in incorporated territories such as Alaska and Hawaii. Incorporated territories are those that the United States Congress deems on a path to statehood. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court ruled the Constitution applied only partially in the newly unincorporated Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines. The Supreme Court created the distinction that unincorporated territories were not on the path to statehood, which effectively allowed for the Constitution to apply differently. The term "insular" signifies that the territories were islands administered by the War Department's Bureau of Insular Affairs. Today, the categorizations and implications put forth by the Insular Cases still govern the United States' territories, though Congress has passed laws changing the treatment of territories with respect to citizenship and tariffs, and more territories have been acquired or become states. The cases are widely considered racist. The De Lima v. Bidwell ruling called the people of the insular areas "savage tribes" and "uncivilized tribes", and the ruling was made to avoid their nationalization. The Downes v. Bidwell case suggested the administration of "alien races" may be "impossible". The District Court of the Virgin Islands called out the cases' "racist doctrine" and the era's "intrinsically racist imperialism"
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Los Casos Insulares son casos decididos por la Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos a principios del siglo XX. A partir del 1901, dicho Tribunal decidió más de una decena de controversias relacionadas con las leyes orgánicas que el Congreso de los Estados Unidos promulgó para los territorios que esa nación había adquirido (Hawái, Filipinas, Guam, y Puerto Rico). Lo que estaba en juego, era si los habitantes de estos territorios recién adquiridos iban a tener los mismos derechos que los ciudadanos estadounidenses de los estados federados. En otras palabras, la controversia consistía en determinar si “la Constitución seguía a la bandera” (Does the Constitution follow the flag?). En esencia la Corte Suprema de los Estados Unidos resolvió que los derechos constitucionales no son extendidos automáticamente a todos los territorios bajo el control estadounidense. Los territorios y sus ciudadanos solo tienen derecho a la plena protección de la Constitución cuando el Congreso de los Estados Unidos los haya incorporado como "parte integrante" de la nación.
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도서 판례(Insular Cases)는 1901년 미국이 미국-스페인 전쟁에서 승리하고 얻은 새로운 영토의 지위에 대해 미국 연방 대법원이 판결한 내용들을 말한다. 즉, 미국이 새로 획득한 영토의 거주민들이 미국 시민권을 가지고 있는지에 대한 연방 대법원의 입장을 정리한 판결들의 통칭이다. 이에 대해 연방 대법원은 미국 헌법에 의한 권리 보호는 미국의 통제 하에 있는 모든 지역으로 자동적으로 확장되지는 않는다고 선언하여 푸에르토리코와 같은 지역의 거주민들은 헌법상의 권리가 결여되어 있다고 해석했다.
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44793