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Integration of International Legislation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 April 2017

Abstract

Efforts are being made in the United Nations toward a greater integration in one field of international legislation which are different from those undertaken on earlier occasions (such as in the case of the Buenos Aires Treaty of 1936 to Co-ordinate Existing Treaties, or even of the Pact of Bogotá of 1948 and the 1949 Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and of the Exploitation of the Prostitution of Others), and which do not seem to have attracted much attention. They are therefore briefly described hereafter.

Type
Current Notes
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1951

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References

1 See U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/1, p. 41.

2 Which had a permanent Opium Subcommittee.

3 Which established an Expert Committee on Habit-Forming Drugs.

4 Resolution 159 (VII) IID, U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/1, p. 4.

5 Id. and U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/2.

6 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/3.

7 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/4.

8 U. N. Docs. E/1889; E/CN.7/216, par. 68.

9 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/4, p. 92.

10 Ibid.

11 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/1, p. 4.

12 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/2, p. 52.

13 Ibid.

14 Ibid.

15 U. N. Doc. E/CN.7/AC.3/4, pp. 94, 95.