Vienna Convention on Succession of States in Respect of Treaties explained

Vienna Convention on Succession of States in Respect of Treaties
Date Signed:August 23, 1978
Location Signed:Vienna
Date Effective:November 6, 1996
Condition Effective:15 ratifications
Parties:23[1]
Depositor:Secretary-General of the United Nations
Languages:Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish
Wikisource1:Vienna Convention on Succession of States in respect of Treaties

The Vienna Convention on Succession of States in Respect of Treaties is an international treaty opened for signature in 1978 to set rules on succession of states. It was adopted partly in response to the "profound transformation of the international community brought about by the decolonization process". It entered into force on 6 November 1996, which was triggered by the succession of the Republic of North Macedonia to the treaty giving it the requisite 15 parties.[1]

The treaty has proven to be controversial largely because it distinguishes between "newly independent states" (a euphemism for former colonies) and "cases of separation of parts of a state" (a euphemism for all other new states).

Article 16 states that newly independent states receive a "clean slate", such that the new state does not inherit the treaty obligations of the colonial power, whereas article 34(1) states that all other new states remain bound by the treaty obligations of the state from which they separated. Moreover, article 17 states that newly independent states may join multilateral treaties to which their former colonizers were a party without the consent of the other parties in most circumstances, whereas article 9 states that all other new states may only join multilateral treaties to which their predecessor states were a part with the consent of the other parties.

Parties to the convention

As of February 2019, there are 23 state parties which have ratified the convention. A further 14 states signed the convention but have not ratified it.[1]

List of parties

StateSignedDepositedMethod
Bosnia and HerzegovinaSuccession from
Brazil
CroatiaSuccession from
CyprusAccession
Czech RepublicRatification
Succession to the signature of
DominicaAccession
EcuadorAccession
EgyptAccession
EstoniaAccession
EthiopiaRatification
IraqRatification
LiberiaAccession
Accession
MontenegroSuccession from
MoroccoAccession
Succession from
Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesAccession
SerbiaSuccession as from
SeychellesAccession
SlovakiaRatification
Succession to the signature of
SloveniaSuccession from
TunisiaAccession
UkraineAccession

List of signatory states

StateSigned
Angola
Chile
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Niger
Pakistan
Paraguay
Peru
Poland
Senegal
Sudan
Uruguay

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vienna Convention on succession of States in respect of treaties. 2013-07-26. 2013-07-26. United Nations Treaty Series.