extraterritorial person - определение. Что такое extraterritorial person
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Что (кто) такое extraterritorial person - определение

CONCEPT IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
ETJ; Extra-territorial jurisdiction; Extraterritorial rights; Extraterritorial privileges

person-to-person         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Person to person; Person-to-person (disambiguation); Person to Person (album)
If you make a person-to-person call, you say that you want to talk to one person in particular. If that person cannot come to the telephone, you do not have to pay for the call. (FORMAL)
ADJ
Person to Person         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Person to person; Person-to-person (disambiguation); Person to Person (album)
Person to Person is a popular television program in the United States that originally ran from 1953 to 1961, with two episodes of an attempted revival airing in 2012. Edward R.
Juridical person         
LEGAL ENTITY WHICH IS DIFFERENT FROM A NATURAL PERSON
Corporate person; Corporate body; Juridicial person; Judicial person; Juristic persons; Juristic person; Corporate persons; Bodies corporate; Juridic person
A juridical person is a non-human legal person that is not a single natural person but an organization recognized by law as a fictitious person such as a corporation, government agency, NGO or International (inter-governmental) Organization (such as United Nations). Other terms include artificial person, corporate person, judicial person, juridical entity, juridic person, or juristic person.

Википедия

Extraterritorial jurisdiction

Extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) is the legal ability of a government to exercise authority beyond its normal boundaries.

Any authority can claim ETJ over any external territory they wish. However, for the claim to be effective in the external territory (except by the exercise of force), it must be agreed either with the legal authority in the external territory, or with a legal authority that covers both territories. When unqualified, ETJ usually refers to such an agreed jurisdiction, or it will be called something like "claimed ETJ".

The phrase may also refer to a country's laws extending beyond its boundaries in the sense that they may authorise the courts of that country to enforce their jurisdiction against parties appearing before them in with respect to acts they allegedly engaged in outside that country. This does not depend on the co-operation of other countries, since the affected people are within the relevant country (or at least, in a case involving a person being tried in absentia, the case is being heard by a court of that country). For example, many countries have laws which give their criminal courts jurisdiction to try prosecutions for piracy, sexual offences against children, computer crimes and/or terrorism committed outside their national boundaries. Sometimes such laws only apply to nationals of that country, and sometimes they may apply to anyone.