| Costas Melakopides - 1998 - 250 páginas
...Alliance, 1948-1949," in Granatstein, ed., Canadian Foreign Policy, 158-82. 2 1 Article 2 reads as follows: The Parties will contribute toward the further development...economic collaboration between any or all of them. NatoFacts andFigures. Brussels: NATO Information Service (1971), 270. 22 Thomson and Swanson, Canadian... | |
| Sean Kay - 1998 - 226 páginas
...the purposes of the United Nations." Article 2 incorporates the Canadian design for general security: "The Parties will contribute toward the further development...economic collaboration between any or all of them." Burdensharing was identified as a priority institutional goal through Article 3: "The Parties, separately... | |
| Bernard Eccleston, Michael Dawson, Deborah J. McNamara - 1998 - 408 páginas
...mission of maintaining international peace and security may be discharged more effectively. Article II The Parties will contribute toward the further development...and will encourage economic collaboration between them. Article III The Parties, individually and in cooperation with each other, by means of continuous... | |
| Roger Buckley - 1998 - 252 páginas
...mission of maintaining international peace and security may be discharged more effectively. Article II. The Parties will contribute toward the further development...promoting conditions of stability and wellbeing. They seek to eliminate conflict in their international economic policies and will encourage economic collaboration... | |
| Martti Koskenniemi - 1998 - 346 páginas
...democracy, individual liberty and the rule of law" (Preamble). In Article 2, they agreed to contribute to the further development of peaceful and friendly international...promoting conditions of stability and well-being. They also pledged themselves to seek to eliminate conflict in their international economic policies and... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1998 - 576 páginas
...guarantor of Euro- American civilization and thus as a pillar of global security." 314 states that "the parties will contribute toward the further development...which these institutions are founded, and by promoting the conditions of stability and well-being. They will seek to eliminate conflict in their international... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1998 - 564 páginas
...essential to the success NATO has known to date. In the late 1990's, as in 1949, the parties will best "contribute toward the further development of peaceful...which these institutions are founded, and by promoting the conditions of stability and well being" through the promotion of the principles of democracy. Senator... | |
| Edelgard Elsbeth Mahant, Graeme Stewart Mount - 1999 - 272 páginas
...doubts about whether Italy was a "North Atlantic" nation, 119 although it did insist on Article II: "The Parties will contribute toward the further development...economic collaboration between any or all of them." 120 Such an article, according to Hume Wrong, Canada's ambassador in Washington, was vital for political... | |
| Raimo Väyrynen - 1999 - 306 páginas
...The product of Canadian perseverance was the "Canadian article," or Article IL It read as follows: "The Parties will contribute toward the further development...economic collaboration between any or all of them" (Spaak, 1959). Among the skeptics was the United States. Washington eventually decided that it was... | |
| Donald Barry, Ronald C. Keith - 1999 - 321 páginas
...broadly conceived, was Article II of the North Atlantic Treaty. "The Parties," it promised, "[would] contribute toward the further development of peaceful...promoting conditions of stability and well-being." They would also "seek to eliminate conflict in their international economic policies and [would] encourage... | |
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