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What has been most generally done to gain
the object in view has been the insertion of
arbitral clauses in treaties which were being
concluded or had already been concluded in
reference to other questions. In this direction
Signor Mancini of Italy has been especially
active. As during the time he was Minister
of Foreign Affairs he had the concluding of
a great number of treaties between Italy and
other countries, he made use of the opportunity
to insert into almost all—in nineteen
instances[1]—an arbitral clause.
We have examples of treaties with such
clauses in the commercial treaty between Italy
and England, 1883; Norway, Sweden, and
Spain, by a supplement in 1887; also England
and Greece, 1886. According to the first two
agreements, all disputes about the right
understanding of the treaties shall be settled by
arbitration, as soon as it becomes apparent
that it is vain to hope for a friendly
arrangement. In the Greco-English treaty it is further
stipulated that all disputes which directly or
indirectly may arise in consequence of that
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