It would depend on which countries refuse act you are referring to. Many, though not all, countries have them and they all differ.
I'll answer that question with another question, why would they?
It depends where you live. Many countries have a refuse collection service.
The manufacturer would have access to additional markets in other countries.
Certain countries have agreements to allow foreign convicts to serve their sentences in their home country. Using these agreements is a decision of the country where the conviction was made.
That would depend on agreements between the two countries involved. For example if a UK citizen commits certain crimes in USA there are agreements between those two countries for that citizen to be deported to the USA to answer for his/her crime. However that citizen cannot be deported for a crime commited against the UK.
Most countries have reciprocal agreements for driving permissions. Some countries will insist that you have an international driving permit others will insist if you come from certain countries. It would be advisable to check before travelling.
That would depend on the country, but it's extremely unlikely. Even if the case had resulted in a conviction most countries probably wouldn't refuse admission on that basis, but since you were never convicted there's very little chance they would refuse to admit you solely because you were charged.
Slavery would probably have died out steadily by the end of the century, as more countries would refuse to trade with a slave-owning nation.
i think that would be an i don't know
"The supervisor wondered if the sanitation engineer would refuse to pick up the refuse."
Some of the effects of the Berlin conference included the agreements that were reached regarding the colonial powers and the countries that they would each occupy. France was allocated some countries, while Britain, Belgium and Germany also had their own shares.