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Article contents
Government Consent to Publication of Diplomatic Correspondence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2017
Abstract
- Type
- Editorial Comment
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © by the American Society of International Law 1940
References
1 See, for example, the report of the Committee on Publications, Proceedings of the Sixth Conference of Teachers of International Law and Related Subjects (1938), p. 9.
2 Report of Committee on Publications of the Department of State, Proc. Amer. Soc. Int. Law, 1938, p. 225 Google Scholar; ibid., 1939, pp. 225–226. See also the statement by Professor Herbert Wright, ibid., 1938, p. 172, concerning the publication in Italian of a verbatim report of the proceedings of the Council of Four.
3 Parl, . Papers, “North America,” No. 9 (1872), p. 19 Google Scholar.
4 Ibid., p. 20. Publication several years ago by the Peruvian Government of documents less than two years old caused “appropriate diplomatic representations” to be made by the Ambassador of the United States. Report of Committee on Publications of the Department of State, Proc. Amer. Soc. Int. Law, 1937, pp. 239–249 Google Scholar; Hearings of the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., on Department of State Appropriation Bill for 1939, p. 104.
5 MS. Instructions, Mexico, Vol. 20, p. 656. This instruction is referred to, but not quoted, in Moore, J. B., Digest, , IV, p. 722 Google Scholar.
6 For. Rel., 1914, Supp., pp. iii-iv (published in 1928).
7 See, for example, the summary of the statement made by the American Government to the Japanese Government in connection with the Alaska salmon fishery situation, U. S. Dept. of State Press Releases, March 26, 1938, pp. 413–417.
8 Moore, John Bassett, “The Dictatorial Drift,” Virginia Law Review, Vol. 23 (1937), pp. 863, 865CrossRefGoogle Scholar.