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The Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Nations Adopted by the American Institute of International Law1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Extract

With this meeting we finish the first decade of this Society. How great is the change of conditions in the field of international law during that period. Ten years ago all the governments of the world professed unqualified respect and obedience to the law of nations, and a very small number of persons not directly connected with government knew or cared anything about it. In this country at least international law was regarded as a rather antiquated branch of useless learning, diplomacy as a foolish mystery, and the foreign service as a superfluous expense. Now that governments have violated and flouted the law in many ways and with appalling consequences, the people of this country at least have begun to realize that observance of the law has a real and practical relation to the peace and honor of their own country and their own prosperity. They are beginning to take an interest in the subject, to discuss it in the newspapers, to inquire how observance of the law may be enforced. There appears a dawning consciousness that a democracy which undertakes to control its own foreign relations ought to know something about the subject. If we had not established this Society ten years ago to study and discuss and spread a knowledge of international law it would surely be demanded now, and we may be certain that our annual public discussions and the publication of the admirable Journal which we have always maintained, with its definite and certain informa-lion upon international events, its interesting and well informed discussion of international topics, and its supplements, with their wealth of authentic copies of international documents, have contributed materially towards fitting the people of our country to deal with the international situations which are before them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1916

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Footnotes

1

Opening address by Elihu Root, as The Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Nations Adopted by the American Institute of International Law1, at its Tenth Annual Meeting in Washington, April 27, 1916 .

References

1 Opening address by Elihu, Root, as President of the American Society of International Law, at its Tenth Annual Meeting in Washington, April 27, 1916 Google Scholar.