
@article{ref1,
title="The United States and the Warsaw Convention",
journal="Harvard law review",
year="1967",
author="Lowenfeld, Andreas F. and Mendelsohn, Allan I.",
volume="80",
number="3",
pages="497-602",
abstract="Problems in the area of public international law are like icebergs: the treaties and reports that emerge from conferences and committees are only a small part of the process, while the mass of preparations, wasted efforts, frustrations, and agonized compromises never comes to the surface. In discussing the story of such a problem - the United States's denunciation of and subsequent readherence to the Warsaw Convention - the authors, both participants in the events they describe, present a view below the waterline. They also explain, and defend, an extraordinary development in the law of accident compensation.<p />",
language="",
issn="0017-811X",
doi="10.2307/1339443",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1339443"
}