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A Pact of Non-Aggression
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2017
Abstract
- Type
- Editorial Comment
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1933
References
1 Printed in Supplement to this number of the JOURNAL , p. 155.
2 Printed in Supplement to this JOURNAL , Vol. 13, pp. 411.
3 League of Nations, Records of the Third Assembly, Plenary Meetings, pp. 291, 292.
4 For the text of the Treaty of Mutual Assistance, and the commentary on the definition of aggression, see Records of the Fourth Assembly, Plenary Meetings, pp. 403, 406.
5 Records of the Fifth Assembly, Plenary Meetings, p. 52
6 For the text of the Geneva Protocol of 1924, see Records of the Fifth Assembly, Committee Meetings, p. 136.
7 The treaties of Locarno are printed in Supplement to this JOURNAL , Vol. 20 (1926), p. 21.
8 Records of the Eighth Assembly, Plenary Meetings, p. 177.
9 The correspondence was published by the Department of State in a pamphlet entitled “ The General Pact for the Renunciation of War.”
10 Proceedings of the American Society of International Law, 1928, p. 143.
11 Records of the Third Assembly, Plenary Meetings, p. 292.
12 The texts of the Lausanne agreements are reproduced in International Conciliation document No. 282, Sept. 1932.
13 Translations are reproduced in the Supplement to this issue of the JOURNAL , pp. 192-194.
14 Since the foregoing was written, press despatches report that on October 10, six South American states—Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Paraguay, and Uruguay—signed at Rio de Janeiro an anti-war treaty proposed by Dr. Carlos Saavedra Lamas, Minister of Foreign Relations of the Argentine Republic. It is assumed that this new treaty is along the lines of the Saavedra Lamas Anti-War Draft Treaty which was summarized and commented upon in this JOURNAL for January, 1933, pp. 109-114.
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