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The Legal Procedures and Techniques of Economic Co-Operation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

The student of international organizations will always find a fruitful field of inquiry in the African continent if only because of the great number of international organizations of different types existing there. I would, however, also suggest that in part, at least, for reasons of a more urgent need for co-operation now manifesting itself on that continent, new departures in international co-operation techniques might be developed. A number of specifically African factors contribute to this notion. Among those that were pointed to at the Uppsala conference is the African concept of sovereignty with roots in the traditional African political system and its application to the formation of international ventures.

Type
Papers of the Uppsala Conference
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1972

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References

2 I shall not make references to particular papers or sources apart from now generally referring the reader to the documents on the various international organizations. In part this paper attempts to reflect also the discussions held and which were taped. Professor Sohn's great work on the African international organizations may serve as a general reference work: , Sohn, Basic Documents on African Regional Organization New York, 1972. Similarly I would like to refer to the compilation by the UNECA secretariat on existing African organizaions: UNECA Doc. NR. E/CN.14/CEC/1; June 6th, 1972.Google Scholar

page 230 note 1 In other contexts I have expanded upon this point. The reader is referred to the literature mentioned at p. 231, n. 1, infra.

page 231 note 1 See further on these corporate bodies, , Sundström, The Public International Utility Corporation: Corporate Law and Public Institutions in International Economic Co-operation, Helsinki 1971Google Scholar, and , Sundström, Public International Utility Corporations: Case Studies of Public International Institutions in Corporate Form, Leiden, 1972Google Scholar; and further by , Sundström, “Comparative law in the development of the law of international corporations”, [in] Mélanges de Droit Comparé en l'honneur du Doyen Åke Malström, Uppsala, 1972. Reference should also be made to Sundström, La Corporation Publica International: Estudio sobre sus Funciones y su Organization, ECLA Doc. Nr. 69–40154.Google Scholar An exposé on primarily financial institutions may be found in , Sundström, De offentliga internationella finansierings bolagen, Helsingfors, 1971. The general statements which are made in this paper find support in the more extensive analysis possibly in the works referred to. For this reason no other references have been included in this paper.Google Scholar

page 236 note 1 The second point is considered to some extent in a paper submitted to the Rome Colloquium on the legal procedures and techniques of economic co-operation. Reference is otherwise made to the literature mentioned at p. 231, n. 1, supra.