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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2017
1 See Proceedings, American Society of International Law, 1952, p. xxiii.
1 Charter of the Organization of American States, Arts. 57, 60, 67–72.
2 Final Act of the First Meeting of the Inter-American Council of Jurists, Resolution IX, “Recognition of De Facto Governments.” See also Report of the Executive Secretary of the Inter-American Council of Jurists, Pan American Union, 1950, pp. 26 ff. The documents to be presented to the Council of Jurists may be found in “Reconocimiento de Gobiernos De Facto, Proyectos y Documentos,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translation available.)
3 Final Act, Resolution X. Report, p. 31. The documents to be presented to the meeting may be found in “Corte Interamericana para Proteger los Derechos del Hombre,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translation available.)
4 As of Feb. 1, 1953, the Juridical Committee had not submitted the preliminary studies.
5 See “Begimen de Asilados, Exilados y Refugiados Políticos, Dictamen y Proyectos,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translation available.)
6 See Final Act, Resolution VII. Report, pp. 20 ff.
7 See “Proyecto de Convención sobre Mar Territorial y Cuestiones Afines,” Pan American Union, 1952; “Parecer e Projeto de Convenção sobre a Nacionalidade e Condição dos Apátridas,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translations available.)
8 For the report of the Juridical Committee on the subject, see “Segundo Dictamen sobre la Posibilidad de Revisión del Código Bustamante o Código de Derecho International Privado,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translation available.)
9 For the reports of the Juridical Committee to be presented to the Council of Jurists, see “Proyecto de Ley Uniforme sobre Venta International de Bienes Muebles” and “Report on Uniformity of Legislation in International Cooperation in Judicial Procedures,” Pan American Union, 1952. (English translation of the first available.)
10 The Charter of the Organization of American States leaves the Council of Jurists free to formulate its own Regulations, with the sole condition that they be in harmony with its Statutes. For the text of the Statutes, see Inter-American Juridical Yearbook, 1950–1951, p. 316.