Examples of New York Convention in the following topics:
-
- The principal instrument governing the enforcement of commercial international arbitration agreements and awards is the United Nations Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of 1958 (the "New York Convention").
- The New York Convention was drafted under the auspices of the United Nations and has been ratified by more than 140 countries, including most major countries involved in significant international trade and economic transactions .
- The New York Convention requires that the states that have ratified it to recognize and enforce international arbitration agreements and foreign arbitral awards issued in other contracting states, subject to certain limited exceptions.
- These provisions of the New York Convention, together with the large number of contracting states, has created an international legal regime that significantly favors the enforcement of international arbitration agreements and awards.
- This map depicts all of the countries who have signed on to the New York Convention.
-
- The Annapolis Convention, led by Alexander Hamilton, was one of two conventions that met to amend the Articles of Confederation.
- Long dissatisfied with the weak Articles of Confederation, Alexander Hamilton of New York played a major leadership role in drafting a resolution for a constitutional convention, which was later to be called the Annapolis Convention.
- "New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and North Carolina had appointed commissioners who failed to arrive in Annapolis in time to attend the meeting, while Connecticut, Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia had taken no action at all.
- Hamilton called the Annapolis Convention together and played a prominent role in the Philadelphia Convention the following year.
- Discuss the impact of the Annapolis Convention on the U.S.
-
- A United States presidential nominating convention is a political convention held every four years in the United States.
- Generally, usage of "presidential nominating convention" refers to the two major parties' quadrennial events: the Democratic National Convention and the Republican National Convention .
- From the point of view of the parties, the convention cycle begins with the Call to Convention.
- The speakers at the 2004 Democratic convention included Ted Kennedy, a forty-year veteran of the United States Senate, and Jimmy Carter, a former Democratic President, while at the Republican convention speakers included Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and Governor George Pataki of New York, two of the largest states in the nation.
- Despite recent controversy maintaining that recent conventions were scripted from beginning to end, and that very little news comes out of the convention, the acceptance speech has always been televised by the networks, because it receives the highest ratings of the convention.
-
- There is no such suspense at modern conventions.
- Due to primaries and increased access to national news, each party essentially knows who its candidate will be before the convention.
- Conventions today are largely ceremonial events with little influence on the presidential campaign beyond how the convention is received in the press.
- From the point of view of the parties, the convention cycle begins with the Call to Convention.
- The evening's speeches - designed for broadcast to a large national audience—are reserved for major speeches by notable, respected public figures; the speakers at the 2004 Democratic convention included Ted Kennedy, a forty-year veteran of the United States Senate, and Jimmy Carter, a former Democratic President, while at the Republican convention speakers included Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and Governor George Pataki of New York, two of the largest states in the nation.
-
- For example only two women attended the Agents' Convention of the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1836.
- Women began to form their own abolition groups, organizing events such as the Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women held in 1837.
- This convention brought 200 women to New York City, where they called for the immediate abolition of slavery in the US.
- The 1848 Seneca Falls convention is one of the key early moments in the suffrage and women's rights movement in the US.
- One of the most notable was New York State granting property rights to married women.
-
- While the Constitutional Convention was held to revise the Articles of Confederation, an entirely new constitution was drafted.
- However, many delegates intended to use this convention to draft a new constitution.
- At the Convention, the primary issue was representation of the states.
- The documents were intended for the state of New York, though people from across the country read them.
- Explain the arguments made by the Federalists and Anti-Federalists over the new U.S.
-
- Although the convention was intended to revise the Articles of Confederation, the intention from the outset of many of its proponents, chief among them James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, was to create a new government rather than fix the existing one.
- At the Convention, several plans were introduced.
- Paterson's New Jersey Plan was ultimately a rebuttal to the Virginia Plan.
- Once the Convention had finished amending the first draft from the Committee of Detail, a new set of unresolved questions were sent to several different committees for resolution.
- This was eventually adopted by the Convention.
-
- The new congress faced many roadblocks in establishing the new nation.
- War was also in the backdrop of the new government, and it had to move in the autumn of 1777 because the British invaded Philadelphia.
- That same day the Virginia Convention instructed its delegation in Philadelphia to propose a resolution that called for a declaration of independence, the formation of foreign alliances, and a confederation of the states.
- American leaders had rejected the divine right of kings in the New World, but recognized the necessity of proving their credibility in the Old World.
- The Congress moved to York, Pennsylvania, and continued their work.
-
- In 1787, fifty-five delegates met at a Constitutional convention in Philadelphia and generated ideas for a bicameral legislature, balanced representation of small and large states, and checks and balances.
- Once the convention concluded and released the Constitution for public consumption, the Federalist movement became focused on getting the Constitution ratified.
- The most forceful defense of the new Constitution was The Federalist Papers, a compilation of eighty-five anonymous essays published in New York City to convince the people of the state to vote for ratification.
- Roosevelt's New Deal policies reached into the lives of U.S. citizens like no other federal measure had.
- Another movement calling itself "New Federalism" appeared in the late 20th century and early 21st century.
-
- The two other presidential candidates included Green Party nominee Jill Stein and Libertarian Party nominee, New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson.
- Romney won New Hampshire, Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania won in Iowa, and former Speaker of the U.S.
- Romney was officially declared as the Republican Party's nominee at the Republican National Convention on August 30, 2012 .
- Conversely, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania lost votes.
- Some states enacted new electoral laws in 2011.