Article 1 sets out the criteria for statehood:
The remaining articles set out various rights and duties of states.
The Montevideo is a regional American convention; but the principles contained in this article have been generally recognized as an accurate statement of customary international law.
Some have questioned whether these criteria are sufficient. According to the constitutive theory of statehood, a state exists only insofar as it is recognized by other states.
Founders of "non-territorial" micronations commonly assert that the requirement in the Montevideo Convention of a defined territory is in some way wrong-headed, for largely unspecified reasons.
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