(3) The right to conditional admission is generally allowed, as seen in laws in regard to immigration.
(4) The foreign state may impose such restrictions upon settlement as it sees fit.
(5) A foreign state may levy such taxes upon the person and goods of aliens as are in accord with state law.
(6) Aliens are subject to the local sanitary and police jurisdiction.
(7) The foreign state has penal jurisdiction over aliens for crimes committed within territorial limits, and many states maintain, also, for such crimes as plotting against the state, counterfeiting state money, or crimes directly imperiling the state's well-being even when committed outside of state limits.
(8) The state may require aliens to render service such as is necessary to maintain public order, even military service, to ward off immediate and sudden danger, e.g. as an attack by savages, a mob, etc., but
(9) A state cannot compel aliens to enter its military service for the securing of political ends, or for the general ends of war.
(10) In nearly all states freedom of commerce is now conceded, the state giving to native and foreigner similar privileges. China still restricts trade to certain free ports.
(11) The holding and bequeathing of property of whatever sort is subject to local law.