Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2014
From the 1880s, states and self-governing colonies in North and South America, across Australasia, and in southern Africa began introducing laws to regulate the entry of newly defined “undesirable immigrants.” This was a trend that intensified exclusionary powers originally passed in the 1850s to regulate Chinese migration, initially in the context of the gold rushes in California and the self-governing colony of Victoria in Australia. The entry and movement of other populations also began to be regulated toward the end of the century, in particular the increasing number of certain Europeans migrating to the United States. It is perhaps unsurprising, then, that Britain followed this legal trend with the introduction of the 1905 Aliens Act, although it was a latecomer when situated in the global context, and certainly within the context of its own Empire. The Aliens Act was passed in response to the persecution of Eastern European Jews and their forced migration, mainly from the Russian Empire into Britain. It defined for the first time in British law the notion of the “undesirable immigrant,” criteria to exclude would-be immigrants, and exemptions from those exclusions. The Aliens Act has been analyzed by historians and legal scholars as an aspect of the history of British immigration law on the one hand, and of British Jewry and British anti-Semitism on the other. Exclusion based on ethnic and religious grounds has dominated both analyses. Thus, the Act has been framed as the major antecedent to Britain's more substantial and enduring legislative moves in the 1960s to restrict entry, regulate borders, and nominate and identify “undesirable” entrants effectively (if not explicitly) on racial grounds.
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17. UDHR (adopted December 10, 1948) UNGA res. 217A (III).
18. Parliamentary discussion of the aliens bills in 1904 brought to light the difficulties in ascertaining or even estimating the number of aliens settling in the United Kingdom. See, “Aliens Bill,” The Times, April 26, 1904, newscutting in The National Archives, London (hereafter TNA) Home Office (hereafter HO) 45/10303/117267/8. Gartner cites 120,000. The Jewish Immigrant in England, 30; Wray suggests 150,000. Wray, “The Aliens Act 1905,” 308.
19. In Musgrove v Chun Teeong Toy (1891) AC 272, 277, the Privy Council noted that there was no legal authority to support the proposition that an alien has a legal right to enter British territory. See also Attorney-General for the Dominion of Canada v Cain (1906) AC 542, 546 relating to the powers of the Dominion Government of Canada to expel aliens. Vattel was cited: “One of the rights possessed by the supreme power in every State is the right to refuse to permit an alien to enter that State, to annex what conditions it pleases to the permission to enter it, and to expel or deport from the State, at pleasure, even a friendly alien, especially if it considers his presence in the State opposed to its peace, order, and good government, or to its social or material interests: Vattel, Law of Nations, book 1, s. 231; book 2, s. 125.”
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21. Aliens Act 1905, s. 1(3).
22. Ibid., s. 1(3)(d).
23. Ibid.
24. The party-political intricacies, investments, and implications of the Aliens Bills and the Aliens Act have been richly detailed by Bernard Gainer in an early study that remains the distinguished account. Gainer, The Alien Invasion.
25. Ibid., 180–1.
26. See Huttenback, Racism and Empire; and Calavita, US Immigration Law.
27. Gainer, The Alien Invasion, 190.
28. Ibid., chs. 6-8. See also Juss, Satvinder, Immigration, Nationality, and Citizenship (New York: Mansell, 1993).Google Scholar
29. See The Times news clippings on the Aliens Bills 1904 and 1905, TNA HO 45/10303/117267.
30. See, for example, House of Commons debate on the Aliens Bill reported in The Times, April 26, 1904.
31. “Poor Jews Defended in House of Commons: Anti-Semitism Denounced in Debate on Aliens Bill. Measure Hotly Attacked. Government denies it was Prompted by Dislike of Jews or Intended to Impair Right of Asylum,” New York Times, April 26, 1904.
32. “Our inquiries proved certainly to the large majority of Commissioners that the advent of the alien immigrant was not a source of disadvantage, but, on the contrary, of great advantage to this country.” See Lord Rothschild, Notes of Deputation from the Jewish Board of Deputies on the Aliens Bill, May 19, 1904, TNA HO 45/10303/117267/78. Rothschild was referring to the Royal Commission on Alien Immigration on which he sat (1892). Subsequently, he served as intermediary between the Jewish Board of Deputies and the government.
33. See returns included in Memorandum on the Proposed Administration of the Act, January 18, 1906, TNA HO 45/10326/131787/5. The returns sought information on age and sex, nationality, last permanent place of address, proposed place of abode in the United Kingdom, occupation, means, prospects of support, conviction of crimes, and whether the entrant have ever been expelled from the United Kingdom.
34. For example, when the Home Office audited the then colonial immigration laws, it noted specifically that in 1896 the New Zealand legislature passed an act for the restriction of Asian immigration, “but the Royal Assent was withheld, the Colonial Office objecting to any measure based expressly on racial distinction.” Aliens—Immigration—As to the Immigration Laws of the Principal British Colonies, February 12, 1907, TNA, HO 112229/20.
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36. Aliens Act 1905, s 8(1).
37. See also Aliens Act 1905, Memorandum on the Proposed Administration of the Act, TNA HO 45/10326/13787/5.
38. This momentarily changed to twelve immigrants per ship, but Secretary of State Herbert Gladstone restored the original twenty of the statute in early 1906. Aliens Act 1905, Memorandum on the Proposed Administration of the Act, TNA HO 45/10326/13787/5.
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41. Asquith spoke in support of the bill, but nonetheless recognized its significance: “This Bill, it must be conceded, is an entirely new departure in legislation, for it gives to an officer of the Executive, by his own act, without any reference to a Court of law or to judicial procedure, power to prohibit admission to these shores of any person who is not a subject of the Crown, provided he comes within certain categories.” “Aliens Bill,” The Times, April 26 1904, TNA HO 45/10303/117267/8. See also Gainer, The Alien Invasion, 181.
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62. According to The Jewish Chronicle, this was drafted by the president of the Board of Deputies, Mr. Alexander, in consultation with Mr. N.L. Cohen. “The Government and Religious Refugees,” The Jewish Chronicle, July 21, 1905, 7.
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90. Pufendorf, Of the Law of Nature and Nations, III.3.9. See also Oppenheim, who wrote in 1905 that it might be deemed necessary to place that foreigner under surveillance or other restrictive measures, as the state had an obligation to prevent individuals from endangering the safety of another state: Oppenheim, L., International Law: A Treatise, vol. 1 (London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1905), para. 316Google Scholar.
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96. 1798 Act, Preamble.
97. Stevens, UK Asylum Law and Policy, 22.
98. Oppenheim, International Law, para. 316. Oppenheim explained that it was on this basis that United States and British legislation (namely, the 1882 Act and the then Aliens Bill, respectively) could exclude particular persons from entering the territory: para. 314. In 1900 the German Reichsgericht stated that “[t]he accordance or refusal of asylum is a right of the state to which the fugitive has fled. The fugitive has no claim to it”: Entscheidungen des Reichsgerichts in Strafsachen 33 (1900)Google Scholar: 99, cited in Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 327.
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100. Pépin, L'Aliens Act de 1905, 196.
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107. “All foreign convicts except those convicted of political offenses, upon arrival, shall be sent back to the nations to which they belong and from whence they came.” An Act to Regulate Immigration 1882, Session I, Ch. 376, s. (4).
108. Sibley and Elias, The Aliens Act and the Right of Asylum, 25–26.
109. Of course, in the absence of an extradition treaty with the requesting state, there is no legal duty to surrender a fugitive at all. Grotius believed that there was such a duty, but state practice has not followed this view: Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 327–28. Morgenstern writes: “The necessity for extradition treaties is a recognition of the competence to grant asylum.” Ibid., 328. On extradition law generally, see Moore, Digest of International Law, vol 1. para. 5. The Belgian Loi sur les extraditions, No. 1195 of October 1, 1833, was the first statute to codify the exception, and it came to serve as an exemplar for extradition legislation in most states. Grahl-Madsen, Atle, The Land Beyond: Collected Essays on Refugee Law and Policy (The Hague and Boston: Martinus Nijhoff, 2001)Google Scholar, 37. See also Van den Wijngaert, Political Offence Exception, 15; and Shearer, Ivan A., Extradition in International Law (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1971)Google Scholar, 167. See also the various resolutions of the Institute of International Law; for example, Oxford (1880), Lausanne (1888), Geneva (1892), and Paris (1894), in Scott, James Brown, Resolutions of the Institute of International Law dealing with the Law of Nations (New York: Oxford University Press, 1916).Google Scholar
110. See for example, Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 329; Extradition Act 1870, footnote to s. 3; R v Governor of Brixton Prison, ex parte Sarno (1916) 2 KB 742, 748.
111. It also exists in another form—diplomatic asylum—which describes the practice of some states, most notably those in Latin America, of providing temporary refuge in diplomatic missions to persons at imminent risk of harm. This practice is not accepted as forming part of international law.
112. Price, Rethinking Asylum, 25. Nancy L. Green focuses on emigration and exit, reversing the “paradigm” of histories of immigration. While the “right to depart” is part of the story, the question of extradition and asylum also needs integration into histories of border regulation. See Green, Nancy L., “The Politics of Exit: Reversing the Immigration Paradigm,” Journal of Modern History 77 (2005): 263–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
113. Jagerskiold argues that movement was relatively liberal in practice: Jagerskiold, A.F., “Historical Aspects of the Right to Leave and to Return,” in The Right to Leave and to Return: Papers and Recommendations of the International Colloquium held in Uppsala, Sweden, 19–20 June 1972, ed. Vasak, Karel and Liskofsky, Sidney (N.p.: The American Jewish Committee, 1976)Google Scholar 6; and McAdam, “An Intellectual History of Freedom of Movement in International Law,” 40–41.
114. Although the British Registration of Aliens Act 1836 made provisions for foreigners to produce identification upon arrival, and required that the masters of all incoming vessels provide Customs with a list of all aliens aboard, there was no power to exclude or deport, or to record the subsequent movement of aliens upon arrival. Furthermore, by the 1880s, the Act and its processes were virtually unused, such that when immigration became a political issue in that decade, few members of Parliament were even aware of the existence of the 1836 Act. See also Pellew, “The Home Office and the Aliens Act, 1905,” 370.
115. Price, Rethinking Asylum, 25. See Shearer, Ivan A., Extradition in International Law (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1971)Google Scholar, 85. Goodwin-Gill noted that “[p]olitical offence is one small part of the wider topic of asylum”: International Law and the Movement of Persons, 142. Van den Wijngaert, Political Offence Exception, 18, has stated that the notion of persecution on political grounds is broader than the political offense exception in extradition law. The latter applies to those who have actively committed a crime; the former encompasses passive victims of political persecution.
116. Van den Wyngaert describes this as “humanitarian” asylum, as opposed to “political” asylum, Political Offence Exception, 71. She refers to Bassiouni, M. Cherif, International Extradition and World Public Order (Leyden: AW Sijthoff, 1974), 107Google Scholar. The Aliens Act thus expanded “to apply to deportation and similar measures … a similar protection in relation to political offences as is provided in extradition: see Shearer, Ivan A., Extradition in International Law (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1971)Google Scholar, 85.
117. Secretary of State Herbert Gladstone described a person claiming asylum under the Act as “a political or religious refugee”: Memorandum to the Members of Immigration Boards, March 9, 1906, TNA HO 45/10326/131787/9.
118. An 1887 inquiry by Lord Salisbury's government, for example, “elicited the truly extraordinary circumstance that none of the immigration laws of the different European States contain[ed] the slightest allusion to the subject” of the right of asylum: Sibley and Elias, The Aliens Act and the Right of Asylum, 130–31.
119. See Resolution Adopted by the Intergovernmental Meeting at Evian, July 14, 1938, para. 8, in Proceedings of the Intergovernmental Committee (Evian, July 6–15, 1938), Verbatim Record of the Plenary Meetings of the Committee: Resolutions and Reports, Annex IV.
120. See Sibley and Elias, The Aliens Act and the Right of Asylum, 130–31; Pépin, L'Aliens Act de 1905, 249: “jamais l'asile n'avait été reconnu par une loi aux réfugiés religieux, c'est-à-dire aux personnes fuyant des poursuites ou des peines motivées par des croyances religieuses, ou des pérsecutions contre ces croyances.”
121. For an overview, see Stevens, UK Asylum Law and Policy, 6–14. Article 120 of the French Jacobean Constitution of 1793 declared that the French people “donne asile aux étrangers bannis de leurs pays pour la cause de la liberté. Il le refuse aux tyrans!” but the conception here is of political freedom fighters, not people persecuted for their religious beliefs. See Van den Wijngaert, Political Offence Exception, 9.
122. Switzerland was said to offer a similar right of asylum as England, although only “les réfugiés politiques” were mentioned in Professor Martens' account of this: Sibley and Elias, 131, referring to de Martens, F., Traité du Droit International (Paris: Librairie Marescq Aine, 1883)Google Scholar, 1: 449. The only other related example is that of the United States's 1917 Immigration Act, discussed below. There was no reference to religious persecution in the national constitutions surveyed during the drafting of the asylum provision in the UDHR: see UN Doc. E/CN.4/AC.1/3/Add.1 (June 11, 1947), 279–84.
123. An Act to Regulate the Immigration of Aliens to, and the residence of Aliens in the United States 1917, Ch. 29, s. 3.
124. The United States' approach to asylum was similarly short-lived, as the Immigration Act of 1924 dispensed with such a provision: see Engstrom, David W., Presidential Decision Making Adrift: The Carter Administration and the Mariel Boatlift (Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Lanham, 1997)Google Scholar, 9, n. 4.
125. The Aliens Restriction Act 1914 was passed on August 5, 1914, in one day. There was no opposition to removing the right of asylum, although the Attorney General stated that the Act would not be enforced against political refugees. See Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 339, 346; and Aliens Restriction (Amendment) Act 1919 (9 & 10 Geo. 5 c. 92).
126. Cohen states: “Indeed such a formal status was only to reappear in British domestic law as late as 1970 under the Rules made under the Commonwealth Immigrants Acts 1962 and 1968”: Cohen, Steve, No One is Illegal: Asylum and Immigration Control Past and Present (Stoke on Trent: Trentham Books, 2003)Google Scholar, 114 (fn. omitted). However, even though refugee status became part of the Act, it was not couched in the terms of a right to asylum.
127. Bonner, David, Executive Measures, Terrorism and National Security: Have the Rules of the Game Changed? (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007)Google Scholar, 108, citing Holmes, John Bull's Island, 87–88.
128. R v Secretary of State for Home Affairs, ex parte Chateau-Thierry (1917) 1 KB 923, 932 (Pickford LJ).
129. Ibid, 930 (Swinfen Eady LJ).
130. William Joynson Hicks, Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, House of Commons, 5th series, vol. 110, col. 310, cited in Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 341.
131. John Clynes, Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, House of Commons, July 18, 1929, 5th series, vol. 230, col. 603, cited in Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 342.
132. Convention Relating to the International Status of Refugees, October 28, 1933, League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. CLIX, no. 3663; see discussion in Beck, Robert J., “Britain and the 1933 Refugee Convention: National or State Sovereignty?” International Journal of Refugee Law 11 (1999): 621–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
133. Cited in Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 342, referring to the Official Journal of the League of Nations (1934), 373. See, further, Beck, Robert J, “Britain and the 1933 Refugee Convention: National or State Sovereignty?” International Journal of Refugee Law 11 (1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar: 615: “From the Home Office's standpoint, refugees were merely another group of foreigners seeking entrance into British territory, and Britain possessed the sovereign authority to limit legitimately their entry.”
134. Hathaway, The Law of Refugee Status, 99. The first time “persecution” was included as a formal criterion of an international law refugee definition was in the 1946 IRO Constitution. Hathaway characterizes refugee law as spanning three periods: the juridical (1920–35, when refugees were defined by their lack of formal diplomatic protection); the social (1935–39, when refugees were seen as “helpless casualties of broad-based social or political occurrences”); and the individual (1938–50, when refugees were perceived as those escaping injustice or a fundamental incompatibility with the home state): see Hathaway, “The Evolution of Refugee Status in International Law: 1920–1950,” 348, 349. (1984) (33)2 International and Comparation Law Quarterly pp. 348–80.
135. Hathaway, “The Evolution of Refugee Status in International Law,” 348, 371. This is also reinforced by his introductory remarks that for more than four hundred years prior to 1920, “there was little concern to delimit the scope of the refugee definition,” and “the reign of liberalism … led most European powers to permit essentially uncontrolled and unrestricted migration.” This free movement “came to an abrupt halt after the First World War,” and governments began to adopt “more guarded approaches to immigration in general and to refugee movements in particular”; ibid., 348, 348 (fns. omitted).
136. Hathaway, The Law of Refugee Status, 5 (emphasis added).
137. Hathaway, James C., “A Reconsideration of the Underlying Premise of Refugee Law,” Harvard International Law Journal 31 (1990)Google Scholar, 129, 140.
138. Hope Simpson, Refugees, 1; see also Simpson, John Hope, The Refugee Problem: Report of a Survey (London: Oxford University Press, 1939)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 3; Goodwin-Gill, International Law and the Movement of Persons, 138.
139. Hope Simpson, Refugees, 76: suggestions for a permanent refugee service were not met with enthusiasm. See also Sjöberg, Tommie, The Powers and the Persecuted: The Refugee Problem and the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees (Lund: Lund University Press, 1991)Google Scholar, 37.
140. See discussion in Price, Rethinking Asylum, 24–25; Coles, Gervase, “Approaching the Refugee Problem Today,” in Refugees and International Relations, ed. Loescher, Gil and Monahan, Laila (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989), 374–75Google Scholar; and Suhrke, Astri, “Global Refugee Movements and Strategies of Response,” in US Immigration and Refugee Policy: Global and Domestic Issues, ed. Kritz, Mary M. (Lexington: Lexington Books, 1983)Google Scholar, 159.
141. Hathaway, “A Reconsideration of the Underlying Premise of Refugee Law,” 139; and Hathaway, The Law of Refugee Status, 99.
142. This language is borrowed from a slightly different context in Goodwin-Gill, Guy S., “Editorial: The International Protection of Refugees: What Future?” International Journal of Refugee Law 12 (2000)CrossRefGoogle Scholar: 2.
143. “First Meeting (Public)” (July 6, 1938), United Kingdom (Lord Winterton) in Proceedings of the Intergovernmental Committee: Verbatim Record of the Plenary Meetings of the Committee, Resolutions and Reports (Evian, July 6–15, 1938), 14 (emphasis added).
144. See also later debates on the UDHR in which “numbers” were invoked; for example, UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 337 (Mr. Shahi, Pakistan); UN Economic and social Council (ECOSOC), Commission on Human Rights, Second Session, Summary Record of Thirty-Seventh Meeting (December 13, 1947), UN Doc. E.CN.4/SR.37 (December 13, 1947), 9 (Lord Dukeston, United Kingdom); ECOSOC, 215th meeting (August 25, 1958), UN Doc. E/SR.215, 654.
145. Hope Simpson, Refugees, 100, referring by way of example to the French law of March 10, 1927: “extradition is not granted when the crime or offence has a political character or where circumstances show the extradition is demanded for a political purpose.”
146. Holborn, Louise W., “The Legal Status of Political Refugees, 1920–1938,” American Journal of International Law 32 (1938)CrossRefGoogle Scholar: 680, 681.
147. Goodwin-Gill, International Law and the Movement of Persons, 99.
148. Morgenstern, “The Right of Asylum,” 339. For later examples in other countries, see 339–40.
149. Ibid, 337.
150. Humphrey, John P., Human Rights and the United Nations: A Great Adventure (Dobbs Ferry: Transnational Publishers, 1984)Google Scholar, 70.
151. ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, First Session, Report of the Drafting Committee to the Commission on Human Rights, UN Doc. E/CN.4/21 (July 1, 1947), 19. This provision was sponsored by Lebanon and China: ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Drafting Committee, First Session, Summary Record of the Fourth Meeting, UN Doc E/CN.4/AC.1/SR.4 (June 13, 1947), 9. For a brief discussion of the drafting history, see Morsink, Johannes, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Origins, Drafting, and Intent (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), 75–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
152. Humphrey, Human Rights and the United Nations, 70.
153. “Geneva text”: text adopted at the 2nd session of the Commission, ECOSOC Official Records, 3rd Year: 6th Session, Supp. No. 1, Report of the Commission on Human Rights, UN Doc. E/600 (December 17, 1947), Annex A, art. 11. For comment, see E/CN.4/57 (December 10, 1947), 9 and E/CN.4/57/Add.1 (December 17, 1947) (emphasis added).
154. ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Second Session, Summary Record of Thirty-Seventh Meeting (December 13, 1947), UN Doc. E.CN.4/SR.37 (December 13, 1947), 9 (Lord Dukeston, United Kingdom).
155. Rejected eleven votes to four, with two abstentions. Ibid., 10.
156. ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Third Session, Comments from Governments on the Draft International Declaration on Human Rights, Draft International Covenant on Human Rights and the Question of Implementation: Communication received from the United Kingdom, UN Doc. E/CN.4/82/Add.9 (May 10, 1948), 5. See, also, the Australian proposal to delete the reference to the right to be granted asylum: UN Doc. E/CN.4/AC.1/21 (May 6, 1948), 1.
157. ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Third Session, Comments from Governments on the Draft International Declaration on Human Rights, Draft International Covenant on Human Rights and the Question of Implementation: communication received from the United Kingdom, UN Doc. E/CN.4/82/Add.9 (May 10, 1948), 2.
158. ECOSOC, Commission on Human Rights, Third Session, Observations of Governments on the Draft International Declaration on Human Rights, Draft International Covenant on Human Rights, and Methods of Implementation: communication received from the French Government, UN Doc. E/CN.4/82/Add.8 (May 6, 1948), 3.
159. UN Doc. E/CN.4/AC.1/20 (May 5, 1948), 8.
160. UN Doc. E/CN.4/AC.1/39 (May 18, 1948), 1. With minor stylistic changes, this was the text put to the delegates: see UN Doc. E/CN.4/104 (May 27, 1948); UN Doc. E/CN.4/99 (May 24, 1948); and UN Doc. E/CN.4/102 (May 27, 1948).
161. UN Doc. E/CN.4/SR.56 (June 4, 1948), 7 (Miss Sender, American Federation of Labor). This view was supported by eminent international lawyers, such as Lauterpacht, International Law and Human Rights.
162. UN Doc. E/CN.4/SR.56 (June 4, 1948), 7 (Mr. Bienenfeld, World Jewish Congress).
163. Ibid.
164. Ibid, 8.
165. Ibid.
166. Morsink, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 77.
167. UN Doc. E/CN.4/SR.57 (June 7, 1948), 11; Report of the 3rd Session of the Commission on Human Rights (May 24–June 18, 1948), UN Doc. E/800 (June 28, 1948), 11; final text adopted UN Doc. A/C.3/326 (November 8, 1948), 1.
168. Summarized in UN Doc. A/C.3/285/REV.1 (October 30, 1948) (namely, proposed amendments by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), Bolivia, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, France, the United Kingdom, Egypt, New Zealand, and Uruguay).
169. USSR: see reference above to its proposal to grant asylum to particular categories of persons; Cuba; Egypt. France reintroduced its proposal that the United Nations work with states to secure asylum for individuals. The Dutch delegate noted that in some circumstances a state would simply be unable to admit all those in need of protection, and for this reason, he proposed that “to seek and be granted asylum” be augmented with the words “to the extent that this is possible”: UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 331 (Mr. Beaufort, The Netherlands).
170. Bolivia, Uruguay; see discussion in UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 328–29.
171. Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand (which withdrew its amendment; see UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 327).
172. UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 331 (Mrs. Corbet, United Kingdom). The representatives of Uruguay and Mexico both noted that they restricted immigration, but not the right of asylum, 333 (Mr. Jiménez de Aréchaga, Uruguay); 333 (Mr. Campos Ortiz, Mexico).
173. UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948) “Summary Records of Meetings,” 121st Meeting (November 3, 1948), UN Doc. SR.121, 330 (Mrs. Corbet, United Kingdom).
174. Ibid., (Mrs. Corbet, United Kingdom), referring to amendment in A/C.3/253.
175. Ibid., 330–31 (Mrs. Corbet, United Kingdom).
176. Ibid., 340 (Mrs. Corbet, United Kingdom).
177. See the support from the following delegations: ibid., 331 (Mr. Baroody, Saudi Arabia); 332 (Mr. Plaza, Venezuela); 334–35 (Mr. Habib, India); and 338 (Mr. Watt, Australia); 122nd meeting, November 4, 1948, UN Doc. SR.122: Haiti, Venezuela, Greece. In the final vote, the United Kingdom proposal was adopted by thirty votes to one, with twelve abstentions: UNGA Official Records, Part 1 (3rd Session, 1948), “Summary Records of Meetings,” 122nd Meeting (November 4, 1948), UN Doc. SR.122, 344.
178. Ibid., 342 (Mr. Cassin, France).
179. Ibid., 347 (Mr Cassin, France).
180. UN Doc. A/C.3/326 (November 8, 1948), 1. The second paragraph reads: “Prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations do not constitute persecution.”
181. Lauterpacht, International Law and Human Rights, 421. The same argument is set out in Lauterpacht, Hersch, “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” British Year Book of International Law 25 (1948): 373–74.Google Scholar
182. Citing the British delegate's conception of “the right to enjoy asylum,” in UN Doc. SR.121, 5 and Lauterpacht, International Law and Human Rights, 422.
183. Lauterpacht, International Law and Human Rights, 422.
184. Morsink, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 78, referring to the “right to seek and be granted … asylum from persecution,” contained in Report of the Third Session of the Commission on Human Rights (24 May to 18 June 1948), UN Doc. E/800 (June 28, 1948), Annex A, p. 11, 12.
185. Don Flyn, “Marking 50 Years of Commonwealth Immigration Controls,” http://www.migrantsrights.org.uk/blog/2012/01/marking-50-years-commonwealth-immigration-controls (November 20, 2012).