Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2017
1 A dispute between the United States and Norway concerning sea transit charges, claimed by the latter for services rendered in the years 1914 to 1919, was settled by arbitration in 1926; see Hudson, Manley O., “American-Norwegian Postal Arbitration,” in this Journal, Vol. 20 (1926), p. 534 Google Scholar. That award was applied to similar pending disputes with Sweden and Denmark: Reiff, Henry, “Enforcement of Multipartite Administrative Treaties in the United States,” in this Journal, Vol. 34 (1940), pp. 661, 673Google Scholar.
2 Text in G. Fr. de Martens, Nouveau Recueil General de Traités, 3d ser., T. XV (1926), pp. 722, 737; see Hudson, Manley O., International Legislation, Washington, 1931—, Vol. I, p. 520 Google Scholar.
3 The Convention of 1920 was later revised (at Stockholm in 1924, at London in 1929, and at Buenos Aires in 1939). The last version (54 U. S. Stat. at Large, Part 2, p. 2049) embodies in Art. 11 corresponding provisions for the arbitration of disputes.
4 The award (in French, with translations into English, German, and Spanish) is published in L’Union Postals, Vol. 71 (1946), pp. 11-25.