On February 28, 1975, the European Economic Community (EEC) and 46 states of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific, signed the ACP-EEC Lome Convention at Lome, the capital of Togo. The Convention, which marks the culmination of a series of arrangements commencing in 1957 between the EEC and African territories on trade and aid relationships, has been hailed as a very significant and an unique instrument. It will now be discussed in the context of several general trends in multilateral trade, development and cooperation and an assessment of its impact on the United States will be made
The ePublication ‘Decolonisation: geopolitical issues and impact on the European integration process...
Available from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, D-21400 Kiel W 1116 (3) / FIZ - Fa...
This article will examine the character of relations between the European Union and African, Caribbe...
On October 31, 1979, representatives from fifty-eight African-Caribbean-Pacific (ACP) and nine Europ...
In 1975, the EEC and 46 former colonies of EEC member states concluded an aid-and-trade agreement th...
One of the reasons behind the re-negotiation of the Lome Convention, resulting in the Cotonou Agreem...
This is a study of the Lome convention - the principles upon which all relations between the states ...
The parties that concluded the Lomé Convention in 1975 were convinced that they had launched a new a...
Following an extensive process of consultation, The European Union has now decided what it wishes to...
The Convention signed at Lomé on 28 February 1975 between the nine members of the European Economic ...
The general principles underlying ACP-EEC trade cooperation, as exemplified by the Lome II Conventio...
Since the 1960s, the EC and its former colonies (African, Caribbean, Pacific ACP countries) have org...
On the 23rd o f June 2000 in Cotonou, Benin, a new convention was concluded for the contracted peri...
Thirty-Fourth Ordinary Session of the OAU Council of Ministers Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 6-15 February 1...
The African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) Group of States is an intergovernmental organization estab...
The ePublication ‘Decolonisation: geopolitical issues and impact on the European integration process...
Available from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, D-21400 Kiel W 1116 (3) / FIZ - Fa...
This article will examine the character of relations between the European Union and African, Caribbe...
On October 31, 1979, representatives from fifty-eight African-Caribbean-Pacific (ACP) and nine Europ...
In 1975, the EEC and 46 former colonies of EEC member states concluded an aid-and-trade agreement th...
One of the reasons behind the re-negotiation of the Lome Convention, resulting in the Cotonou Agreem...
This is a study of the Lome convention - the principles upon which all relations between the states ...
The parties that concluded the Lomé Convention in 1975 were convinced that they had launched a new a...
Following an extensive process of consultation, The European Union has now decided what it wishes to...
The Convention signed at Lomé on 28 February 1975 between the nine members of the European Economic ...
The general principles underlying ACP-EEC trade cooperation, as exemplified by the Lome II Conventio...
Since the 1960s, the EC and its former colonies (African, Caribbean, Pacific ACP countries) have org...
On the 23rd o f June 2000 in Cotonou, Benin, a new convention was concluded for the contracted peri...
Thirty-Fourth Ordinary Session of the OAU Council of Ministers Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 6-15 February 1...
The African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) Group of States is an intergovernmental organization estab...
The ePublication ‘Decolonisation: geopolitical issues and impact on the European integration process...
Available from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, D-21400 Kiel W 1116 (3) / FIZ - Fa...
This article will examine the character of relations between the European Union and African, Caribbe...