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Membership Chart

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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Extract

Listed below is the membership of United Nations bodies for 1967. Unless otherwise noted, membership expires on December 31 of the year indicated in parentheses. Where names of individuals are listed, the members serve in their personal capacities and not as representatives of states; their nationalities are given for information only.

Type
International Organizations: Summary of Activities: I. United Nations
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1967

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References

page 334 note 1 Elected to a two-year term by the General Assembly during its 1462nd plenary meeting, November 11, 1966.

page 334 note 2 Elected or reelected to a three-year term by the General Assembly during its 1462nd plenary meeting, November 11, 1966.

page 334 note 3 Elected to a nine-year term by the General Assembly and the Security Council voting concurrently, the Assembly at its 1456th and 1457th plenary meetings, November 2 and 3, 1966, and the Security Council at its 1315th meeting, November 2, 1966. Judges' terms of office expire on February 5 of the year listed. Officers serve threeyear terms ending in 1970. Judges are listed in order of precedence.

page 334 note 4 At its 1460th plenary meeting on November 10, 1966, the General Assembly elected 25 members of the International Law Commission to fiveyear terms commencing January 1, 1967.

page 334 note 5 Reappointed for 1966-1967 by the General Assembly during its 1407th plenary meeting, December 21, 1965.

page 334 note 6 Established under General Assembly Resolution 2049 (XX), December 30, 1965, and composed of fourteen members designated by the President of the General Assembly.

page 334 note 7 Established by the General Assembly under Resolution 2145 (XXI), on October 27, 1966, its members subsequently designated by the President of the Assembly.

page 334 note 8 Endorsed by the General Assembly under Resolution 1722 (XVI) of December 20, 1961.

page 334 note 9 Established by the General Assembly under Resolution 2153 B (XXI), November 17, 1966, its members subsequently designated by the President of the Assembly.

page 334 note 10 Established as a seventeen-member committee by the General Assembly under Resolution 2081 (XX), December 20, 1965, and enlarged to 23 members under Resolution 2217 D (XXI), December 19, 1966. Its members are appointed by the President of the Assembly.

page 334 note 11 Nominated by the President of the Assembly to fill the vacancy caused by the withdrawal of Denmark and confirmed by the Assembly at its 1500th plenary meeting on December 20, 1966.

page 334 note 12 Elected by the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) at its 1452nd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the six vacancies created by the enlargement of the Commission to 24 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that Czechoslovakia and Ghana would serve for one year, Pakistan and Mali for two years, and Ecuador and Tunisia for three years.

page 334 note 13 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1452nd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the nine vacancies created by the enlargement of the Commission to 27 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that Jamaica, Niger, and Pakistan would serve for one year, Chile, Malawi, and Nigeria for two years, and Ecuador, the Philippines, and Rwanda for three years.

page 334 note 14 Under Resolution 1139 IV (XLI) of July 29, 1966, ECOSOC decided that the Social Commission would retain its status as a functional commission of the Council but that it would be redesignated the Commission for Social Development in order to clarify its role as a preparatory body of ECOSOC in the whole range of social development policy.

page 334 note 15 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1452nd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the fourteen vacancies created by the enlargement of the Commission to 32 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that Cyprus, Iran, Spain, and Uganda would serve for one year, Peru, Tanzania, and Venezuela for two years, and Canada, Chile, Morocco, Norway, Pakistan, and the Philippines for three years.

page 335 note 16 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1452nd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the fourteen vacancies created by the enlargement of the Commission to 32 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that Austria, Costa Rica, Somalia, and Tanzania would serve for one year, Dahomey, Iran, the United Arab Republic, and Yugoslavia for two years, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Greece, Guatemala, Italy, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Poland, and the United Kingdom for three years.

page 335 note 17 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1453rd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the three vacancies created by the enlargement of the Commission to 24 members in accordance widi ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that Ghana would serve for one year, India for two years, and Brazil, China, Jamaica, Japan, Morocco, Turkey, the Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom for three years.

page 335 note 18 Elected by ESOSOC at its 1453rd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the eleven seats created by the enlargement of the Commission to 32 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution 1147 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots that the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, Kenya, Uganda, and Venezuela would serve for one year, Malaysia, Mauritania, and the Philippines for two years, and Australia, Guatemala, Guinea, Hungary, Iran, Iraq, the Netherlands, Peru, Tunisia, Turkey, and the United Arab Republic for three years.

page 335 note 18 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1453rd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the seats falling vacant at the end of 1966 as well as the six seats created by the enlargement of the Committee to 27 members in accordance with ECOSOC Resolution n 47 (XLI), August 4, 1966. The Council decided by the drawing of lots mat Panama and the United Kingdom would serve for one year, the Sudan and Tunisia for two years, and Canada, Denmark, Peru, Poland, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Thailand, Togo, and Venezuela for three years.

page 335 note 20 Elected by the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to fill the vacant seats of the twelve allotted to FAO.

page 335 note 21 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1453rd meeting, November 18, 1966, to fill the four vacant seats.

page 335 note 22 UNCTAD was established as an organ of the General Assembly under General Assembly Resolution 1994 (XIX), December 30, 1964, and composed of the Member States of the UN and the other states members of the specialized agencies or of the International Atomic Energy Agency (Holy See, Indonesia, Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino, South Korea, South Vietnam, Switzerland, Western Samoa, and West Germany). The Trade and Development Board is composed of 55 members elected by the Conference at each regular session.

page 335 note 23 Elected or reelected for a three-year term by ECOSOC at its 1418th meeting, March 7, 1966.

page 335 note 24 Elected by ECOSOC at its 1418th meeting, March 7, 1966, to die seat vacated by Jordan.

page 335 note 25 Established by the General Assembly under Resolution 2152 II (XXI), November 17, 1966. The 45 members of the Board were elected by the General Assembly at its 1497th plenary meeting, November 17, 1966. The Assembly decided by the drawing of lots which members would serve for three years, for two years, and for one year.