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Is the International Labor Organization Autonomous?

Paul G. Steinbicker

American Political Science Review, 1935, vol. 29, issue 5, 866-870

Abstract: When the United States last year became a member of the International Labor Organization, many people deplored the decision as being the first covert step toward full membership in the League of Nations. Those whose outlook was more sympathetic to international cooperation replied, in defense, that the Labor Organization is independent of the League, having its own buildings, its own separate organs, its own secretariat, and so on; that its membership is not identical with that of the League; and that therefore a state, by becoming a member of the Labor Organization assumed no connection whatever with the League.

Date: 1935
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