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Our Policy of Non-Recognition in Central America1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2017
Extract
The treaty obligation, which the Central American countries have imposed upon themselves, to refuse recognition to new governments established in those countries in certain specified circumstances, was first adopted in their General Treaty of Peace and Amity of December 20, 1907, and their supplemental treaty of the same date.2 The stipulations of these treaties were restated and consolidated in their later General Treaty of Peace and Amity of February 7, 1923, which treaty is still in force.3
- Type
- Editorial Comment
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1931
Footnotes
See editorial by this writer on “ The Central American Policy of Non-Recognition,” this Journal , Vol. 19 (1925) , p. 164.
References
2 The texts of these treaties were printed in Supplement to this Journal , Vol. 2 (1908) , pp . 219 ,229.
3 Printed in Supplement to this Journal, Vol.17(1923), p.117.
4 Address by the Honorable Henry L. Stimson before the Council on Foreign Relations, New York City, February 6, 1931.
5 “ Revolution, Recognition and Intervention,” by Lawrence Dennis. Foreign Affairs, January, 1931, p. 212, el 8eg.
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