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Guide to Basic Treaty Research in Tarlton Law Library

Prepared by , Foreign & International Law Librarian

I. Standard Sources

United States Sources

Non-United States Sources

Historical Sources

II. Finding International Agreements & Verifying Their Current Status

III. International Agreements on the Internet

General Collections

Multilaterals Project (Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy)

Avalon Project (Yale Law School)

Agreements Sponsored by International Organizations

For up-to-date ratification and other status information, the websites sponsored by international organizations and treaty sercretariats listed here are excellent.

Council of Europe

Hague Conference on Private International Law

International Humanitarian Law (ICRC)

International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT)

International Labor Organization (ILOLEX)

Investment Instruments Online (UNCTAD)

Organization of American States

United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL)

United Nations Environment Programme

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

World Intellectual Property Organization

World Trade Organization

Treaty Secretariats

Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes

Convention on Biological Diversity

Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species

Ozone Secretariat

Ramsar Convention on Wetlands

United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

IV. Citing International Agreements (U.S. Rules)

Researchers can start with the convenient list maintained by Mary Rumsey (University of Minnesota Law Library): Frequently-Cited Treaties and Other International Instruments, http://www.law.umn.edu/library/tools/pathfinders/most-cited.html.

A useful trick is to search on the name of the agreement in the law review databases of Westlaw or Lexis. There will considerable variation, but it is usually not difficult to pick out the most accurate citation.

If it is necessary to construct a citation from scratch, the researcher will need to refer to the rule in either The Bluebook (18th ed. 2005) or the ALWD Citation Manual (2d ed. 2003). In the former, it is Rule 21.4; in the latter, Rule 21.

As to Rule 21 in the ALWD Citation Manual, it must be said that it is incomplete, inadequate, and inaccurate. A single example will have to suffice: In chart 21.1 accompanying the rule (found only on the web, not in the book), U.N.T.S. is given last in a list of 17 authorized sources, and, to compound matters, it is described as "unofficial"! In short, international agreements should not be cited according to the ALWD Citation Manual until the rule is revised and improved.

Rule 21.4 of The Bluebook has several sub-rules. The critical one is 21.4.5 on citation sources. Condensing sub-rule 21.4.5 to its essentials produces the following:

- When the U.S. is a party, cite one source in the following order of preference: U.S.T. or Stat., T.I.A.S., T.S. or E.A.S., Senate Treaty Documents or Senate Executive Documents. (Some additional possibilites are given, but they are not good.)
- When the U.S. is not a party, cite one source published by an international organization. If not therein, cite the official source of one party, e.g., Austl. T.S.
- When an agreement does not appear in one of the foregoing sources, cite to I.L.M., if therein. If not, cite to another "unofficial" source, which may include the websites of governments or intergovernmental organizations.

Finally, table T.4 on p. 334 gives the titles, abbreviations, and dates of coverage of 16 authorized citation sources.

V. Other Research Guides

Guide to Treaty Research (Columbia Law Library)

ASIL Guide to Electronic Resources for International Law - Treaties