David,
One oft-stated reason for this phenomenon is that foreign ministries
and heads of state, which negotiate and sign treaties, may have
different incentives and constituencies than legislatures, which
ratify them. A President or Prime Minister will meet and have to work
with other heads of state in their international relations. They will
often have incentives to cooperate with each other and treaties and
other international agreements may then follow. Legislatures, on the
other hand, generally do not engage in international relations and may
be more sensitive to domestic political considerations. Thus, signing
a boundary treaty might be a prerequisite for heads of state to be
able to engage in more regular international trade and relations, but
it also might be domestically unpopular for a legislator to be seen by
his or her constituents to be acceding to an agreement which might
"give away" territory to a neighbor. A signed but unratified treaty
will be the result.
Regards (and happy New Year) to all~
Peter Prows
Begin forwarded message:
> From: [log in to unmask]
> Date: 19 January 2009 8:32:42 AM PST
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Introduction and inquiry about spanish borders
> Reply-To: [log in to unmask]
>
> This seems to be a fairly common occurrence. Can someone explain
> why states negotiate agreements and then do not ratify them? Change
> of government? But if the problem is policy why do the new
> governments not repudiate the agreements rather than just leave them
> to languish? It is not uncommon to hear of treaties just sitting
> there, unratified, for decades -- in fact there is a whole
> jurispreudence about this situation. Is there some reason or
> purpose to this?
>
> David Phillips
> San Francisco
>
> From: International boundaries discussion list on behalf of DAVID
> ANDERSON
> Sent: Mon 1/19/2009 2:00 AM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Introduction and inquiry about spanish borders
>
> Welcome to the list! If the scope of your enquiry extends to maritime
> boundaries, information about the Franco-Spanish agreement
> delimiting the
> Bay of Biscay can be found in Report No 9-2 in Charney and
> Alexander (eds),
> International Maritime Boundaries, volume II (Nijhoff,1993), pp 1719
> ff.
> Spain's two agreements with Portugal about maritime boundaries were
> signed
> subject to ratification as long ago as 1976. However, so far as I am
> aware,
> they have not been ratified and thus have not entered into force.
> Information about the unratified agreements can be found in Report
> No 9-7 in
> the same volume at pp 1791 ff.
> Best wishes,
> David Anderson
> ---- Original Message -----
> From: "Karolina Glab" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2009 12:32 PM
> Subject: [INT-BOUNDARIES] Introduction and inquiry about spanish
> borders
>
>
> Welcome to all the memebers of INT-BOUNDRIES forum,
>
> My name is Karolina Glab and I`m a student of University of Wrocław,
> Poland
> at Department of Geography. I`m in course of writing the thesis about
> Political Geography of Spain since 1975. My work includes the
> chapter about
> the spanish borderlines. And here I`m facing the problem, as so far I
> haven`t found official data bases about all the international
> agreements
> between Spain and its neighbouring countries mentioning point by
> point the
> borderlines demarcation I need.
>
> Is anybody who could help me to show where to look for those
> historic law
> documents or who know a person I cold talk to about it? I can speak
> Polish,
> English and Spanish.
>
> Best regards,
> Karolina Glab
> [log in to unmask]
> University of Wrocław,Poland
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