Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword to the first edition by Sir Arthur Watts
- Preface to the second edition
- Articles of the Convention cited in the text
- Table of treaties
- Table of MOUs
- Table of cases
- Glossary of legal terms
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969
- 2 What is a treaty?
- 3 MOUs
- 4 Capacity to conclude treaties
- 5 Full powers
- 6 Adoption and authentication
- 7 Consent to be bound
- 8 Reservations
- 9 Entry into force
- 10 Treaties and domestic law
- 11 Territorial application
- 12 Successive treaties
- 13 Interpretation
- 14 Third states
- 15 Amendment
- 16 Duration and termination
- 17 Invalidity
- 18 The depositary
- 19 Registration and publication
- 20 Dispute settlement and remedies
- 21 Succession to treaties
- 22 International Organisations
- 23 Drafting and final clauses
- Appendices
- Index
6 - Adoption and authentication
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword to the first edition by Sir Arthur Watts
- Preface to the second edition
- Articles of the Convention cited in the text
- Table of treaties
- Table of MOUs
- Table of cases
- Glossary of legal terms
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969
- 2 What is a treaty?
- 3 MOUs
- 4 Capacity to conclude treaties
- 5 Full powers
- 6 Adoption and authentication
- 7 Consent to be bound
- 8 Reservations
- 9 Entry into force
- 10 Treaties and domestic law
- 11 Territorial application
- 12 Successive treaties
- 13 Interpretation
- 14 Third states
- 15 Amendment
- 16 Duration and termination
- 17 Invalidity
- 18 The depositary
- 19 Registration and publication
- 20 Dispute settlement and remedies
- 21 Succession to treaties
- 22 International Organisations
- 23 Drafting and final clauses
- Appendices
- Index
Summary
And where, though all things differ, all agree.
Adoption
Once negotiations are complete, it is necessary for the states which took part in drawing up the treaty to adopt the text. This is the first decisive stage in the conclusion of a treaty. Then, the text has to be authenticated (see below). Thereafter, states can express their consent to be bound by the treaty (see Chapter 7).
The term adoption is not defined in the Convention, but is the formal act by which the form and content of the treaty are settled; and, a state which takes part in the drawing up and adoption of the text is known as a ‘negotiating State’ (Article 2(1)(e)). Unless the circumstances suggest otherwise, the act of adoption does not amount to authentication of, or consent to be bound by, the treaty, or that the treaty has entered into force. However, as will be explained, in the case of bilateral treaties these stages are sometimes run together.
The rules on adoption in Article 9 embody the classic principle that, unless otherwise agreed, adoption needs the consent of all the states which participated in drawing up the text. Until recent times this was the norm. The article, however, recognises that since the Second World War, in drawing up treaties in large international conferences or within international organisations, the practice had been for adoption by the affirmative vote of a specified majority of the states.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Modern Treaty Law and Practice , pp. 84 - 93Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007