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Should Great Britain and the United States be Represented at the Hague Conferences on Private International Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Extract

At the Antwerp meeting of the International Law Association in 1903, a paper was presented by Mr. Justice Phillimore indicating the desirability of having Great Britain participate in the Hague Conferences on Private International Law. At the same meeting, a resolution was adopted on the motion of Mr. Justice Kennedy to the effect that the Association “should take steps respectfully to lay before the British Government the points dealt with in that paper” with a view to its participation in the conferences. Although not referring in terms to America, the resolution was seconded by Dr. Gregory, an American member, and the discussion showed plainly that it was the sense of the meeting that the resolution was intended to apply also to the United States.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1913

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References

1 1A paper read at the Madrid Conference of the International Law Association,October, 1913.

2 Report of the 21st Conference, 1903, p. 80.

3 Meili & Mamelok, Internationales Privat und Zivilprozessrecht avf Grand der Haager Konventionen (Zurich, 1911), p. 34.

4 See Moore’s Digest of International Law, Vol II, pp. 124,125.

5 24 & 25 Vict., ch. 11.

6 Groodnow in 25 Political Science Quarterly, 577.