College and Research Libraries


By JOSE MEYER 

Significant Early Documents of the 
Specialized Agencies Relate~ to . the 
United Nations 

T HE Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, at its final meeting 
in London on Feb. 18, 1946, set up, together 
with other commissions and committees, a 
negotiating committee of twelve members 
to study methods of bringing the Interna-
tional Labour Organization, the Food and 
Agriculture Organization, the World Bank 
and Fund, and UNESCO into relationship 
with the United Nations and to work out 
preliminary draft agreements with these 
agencies. The draft agreements were sub-
mitted to the second session of the Economic 
and Social Council which opened at Hunter 
College on May 25, 1946. 

The International Labour Conference, 
at its twenty-seventh session, adopted on 
Nov. 5, 1945, an instrument for the amend-
ment of the Constitution of the Interna-
tional Labour Organization, enabling it to 
establish a cooperative relationship with the 
United Nations. The text may be found 
in the Official Bulletin. of the International 
Labour OfficeJ v. 28, Dec. 15, 1945, p. 1-4. 

The other three agencies have in their . 
constitutions special clauses providing for a 
relationship with the United Nations. 

Food and Agriculture Organization of the 
United Nations (F.A.O.) 

F.A.O. was the first of the new perma-
nent United Nations organizations. It was 
originally planned at the United Nations 
Conference on Food and Agriculture at Hot 

Springs, Va., from May 18 to June 3, 1943· 
The first step was the setting up of an 
Interim Commission on Food and Agricul-
ture, July 15, 1943, for the purpose of 
formulating and recommending for con-
sideration by all member governments a 
specific plan for a permanent organization 
in the field of food and agriculture. 

.The original documents of the Hot 
Springs Conference were in t he form of 
loose mimeographed papers, not for general 
circulation. The final act and relevant 
documents were published in the United 
States as: 

United Nations Conference on Food and Agri-
cultu.reJ Hot SpringsJ VirginiaJ May 18-J une 
JJ 1943· Final Act and Section Reports. Wash-
ington, Government Printing Office, 1943. 
59P· (Department of State Publication, 1948, 
Conference Series 52.) 

In Great Britain, the final act and accom-
panying documents were issued in two 
separate publications as: 

Final Act of the United Nations Conferenc e 
on Food and Agriculture. London, H.M. 
Stationery Office, I943· (Cmd. 6451.) 

United Nations Conferenc e on Fo.od and Agri-
culture. Section Reports on the Conference. 
London, H.M. Stationery Office, 1943. ( Cmd. 
646!.) 

• After a year's work, the interim commis-
sion completed the draft of a constitution 
for the Food and Agriculture Organization 
of the United Nations. This, together with 
a detailed report on its activities, was sub-

142 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 

/ ' 



mitted in the following form to each of the 
forty-four governments represented at the 
Hot Springs Conference: 

() 

United Nations by the Interim Commission on 
Food and Agriculture. Washington, D.C., 
July I5, I945· 3P· 

First Report to the Government of the United This_contained recommendations concerning 
Nations by the Interim Commission on Food the future of the International Institute of 
and Agriculture. Washington, Aug. 1, I944· · Agriculture in Rome. 
55P· 

On Dec. 14, 1944, the British Govern-
ment accepted this constitution. The text 
of its instrument of acceptance, together 
with the text of the constitution itself and, 
as an appen~ix, the first report of the interim . 
commission, were published as: 

Documents Relating to the Food and Agricul-
ture Organization of the United Nations, rst 
August-14th December 1944. Lond~n, H.M. 
Stationery Office, I945· 42p. ( Cmd. 6590.) 
Miscellaneous No. 4 (I945) 

By May 30, I945, twenty-two nations had 
accepted the constitution, making ·it possible 
for the organization to come into existence. 
The interim commission carried out its final 
function before being automatically dis-
solved upon the coming into · being of 
F.A.O.; it convened the first plenarY, session 
of F.A.O. at Quebec City in Canada, Oct. 

16, 1945· 
Five technical committees of the interim 

commission had, in the meantime, conducted 
research on agricultural production, nutri-
tion and food management, forestry, fisher-
ies, and statistics respectively and submitted 
the results of their findings in the form of 
reports to the Quebec Conference: 

Five Technical Reports on Food and Agricul-
ture, Submitted to the United Nations Interim 
Commission on Food and Agriculture by Its 
Technical Committees on Nutrition a.nd Food 
Management, Agricultural lfroduction, Fish-
eries, Fo.restry and Primary Forest Products, 
Statis-tics. Washington, D.C., Aug. 20, I945· 
3 13p. Issued also in five separate parts. 

Other documents distributed to member 
governments at the time of the Quebec Con-
ference were : 
S econd Report to the Governments of the 

APRIL, 1947 

Third Report to the Governments of the 
United Nations by the Interim Commission on 
Food and Agriculture, Transmitting the Re-
port of the Technical Committee on Forestry 
and Primary Forest Products. Washington, 
D.C., Apr. 25, I945· 47P· 

Th e Work ofF A 0: A General Report to the 
First Session of the Conference of the Food 
and Agr_iculture Organization of the United 
Nations, Prepared by the Reviewing Panel and 
Circulated to Members of the Interim Com-
missio,n by the Executive Committee. Wash-
ington, D.C., Aug. 20, I945· 57P· 

The conference lasted from Oct. I 6 to 
Nov. I, I945· Two commissions, A and 
B, were set up, one technical, comprising 
the above five committees, the other ad-
mtmstrative. The principal documents of 
the conference were the journal and the final 
reports of these two commissions, which 
were unanimously adopt_ed. There were, 
in addition, a large number of other paper~, / 
including reports of meetings of subcommis-
sions, all of them mimeographed. These 
were not available for general distribution. 
The commission reports, tog~ther with a 
number of other documents, wete published 
later by F.A.O. as: 

First Session. Conference of the Food and 
Agriculture Organization of the United N a-
tions. Journal. v. I, no. I-I5, Oct. 16-Nov. 
I, I945· Quebec. City, Canada, I945· 

Food and Agriculture . Organization of the 
United Nations. Report of the First Session 
of the Conference, Held at the City of Que-
bec, Ca,nada, October r6 toN ovember I, 1945, 
Containing the Reports of . Commission A 
(Policy and Program} and Commission B 
(Organization and Administration} with Sup-
plementary Data Relating to Resolutions and 
Recommendations, the Budget, Rules of Pro-

143 



cedure, Financial Regulations, and the Con-
stitution. Washington, January I 946. xxi, 
89p., in double columns. 

In Great Britain, these documents were 
· published as: 
1 
Documents Relating to the First Session of 
the Food ~nd Agriculture Conference of the 
United Nations, Quebec, Canada, r6th Oc-
tober-1St November, 1945. London, H.M. 
Stationery Office, January I946. 62p. ( Cmd. 
6731.) Miscellaneous No. 3 ( I946) 

There is also available from F.A.O. a 
limited number of copies of a made-up 
volume entitled Basic Documents of F.A .0., 
at $2.50 per copy, containing the following 
documents: 

Report of the First Session of the Conference, 
Held at the City of Quebec, Canada, October 
16 to November I, 1945. 

F AO Conference. First session. Draft: Pro-
visional Program of Work for the First Ses-
sion. Washington, Aug. 4, 1945. 

United Nations Interim Commission on Food 
and Agriculture. The Work of FA 0. 
[Washington, Aug. 20, I945.] 

Third Report to the Governments of the 
U.nited Nations by the Interim Commission 
on Food and Agriculture. Washington, Apr. 
25, 1945· 

Second Report to the Governments of the 
United Nations by the Interim Commission 
on Food and Agriculture. Washington, July 
16, I945· 

First Report to the Governments of the 
United Natt'ons by the Interim Commission on 
Food and Agriculture. Washington, Aug. I, 
I944· 

United Nations Conference on Food and Agri-
culture, Hot Springs, Va., May I8-June 3, 
I943· Final Act and Section Reports. Wash-
ington, I943· 

At Quebec a resolution was adopted call-
ing for the taking over by F.A.O. of the 
library, archives, and properties of the In-
ternational Institute of Agriculture in 
Rome, the Centre International de Sylvi-

culture, and the Comite International du 
Bois. It was further decided that English, 
French, Spanish, and Russian were to be 
the official languages, with English and 
French to be used in debates and documents. 

During the first part of April I 946 
F.A.O. held a meeting in London of a panel 
of experts from various international and 
regional organizations for consultation in 
connection with the setting up of permanent 
services in the field of statistics, scientific 

' abstracting, library service, . and biblio-
graphic information. 

Additional early publications of . F.A.O. 
which have been widely circulated are: 

FAO Information Service Bulletin, no. I, Dec. 
3, I945; no. 2, Apr. 2, 1946. Irregularly is-
sued. 

FA 0, Cornerstone For a House of Life by 
Gave Ha~bidge. [Washington, 1946.] 24P· 

Facts about FAO. Washington, D.C., Apr. 
12, I946. 7P· 

Bretton Woods Agreements 

The . United Nations Monetary and 
Financial Conference at Bretton Woods, 
N.H., July 1-22, 1944, attended by experts 
of forty-four nations, dealt with machinery 
for currency stabilization and to provide 
long-term credit for permanent reconstruc-
tion and the development of untapped pro-
ductive resources. For this purpose, draft 
constitutions for an international monetary 
fund and for a bank for reconstruction and 
development were drawn up. Each of these 
bodies is to be headed by a board of gover-
nors composed of representatives of all the 
member countries and a board of executive 
directors of whom there are to be always at 
least twelve, with five of their number to 
represent the five members having the 
largest national quotas. 

The original documentation of the Bret-
ton Woods · Conference consisted of over 
five hundred separate mimeographed papers, 

144 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRA.RIES 



comprising in addition to reports of meetings --Charts Relating to the Bretton Woods 
and technical papers submitted, the follow- . Proposals [Washington D.C.] Apr. 30, I945· 

I8p. and charts. Oblong. 
ing: 

Journal of the United Nations Monetary and 
Financial Conference. Bretton Woods, N.H., 
no. I-22, July I-22, I944· Mimeographed. 

The only printed doc_ument of the confer-
ence was: 

United Nations Monetary and Financial Con-
ference. Officers of the Conference~ Mem-
bers of the Delegations~ Officers of the Sec-
relariat. Revised to July g. Bretton Woods, 
N.H., July I944· 32p. 

·These were available only. to delegations 
and their staffs: The text of the final agree-
ment~ was issued in the United States as: 

Articles of Agreement: International ¥one-
tory Fund and International Bank for Recon-
struction and Development~ United Nations 
M o.netary and Financial Conference~ Bretton 
Woods~ N.H.~ July I to 22~ 1944· Washing-
ton, D.C., U.S. Treasury [I945]. 8gp. 

United Nations Monetary and Financial Con-
ference, Bretton Woods, N.H., July I to July 
22, I944· ·Final Act and Related Documents. 
Washington, Government Printing Office, 
I944· I22p. (Department of State Publica-
tion 2I87, Conference Series 55.) 

. In an effort to win support for United 
States participation in the fund and · the 
bank, the U. S. State Department and 
Treasury, besides reprinting various state-
ments made by officials in support of the 
measure, issued the following pamphlets, 
which are available free: 

Conference at Bretton Woods Prepares Plans 
for International Finance by John Parke 
Young. Washington, Government Printing 
Office, I944• 28p. (Department of State 
Publication 2216, Conference Series 57.) 

U.S. Treasury. The Bretton Woods Pro-
posals. Washington, D.G., Feb. I5, I945· 
IJp. 

--The Bretton Woods Proposals. Ques-
tions and Answers on the Fund and Bank. 
Washington, D.C., Mar. 15, I945· I6p. 

APRIL~ 1947 

The British Government, in the mean-
. time, published the documents ·relating to 
the Bretton Woods Conference as: 

·United Nations Monetary and Financial Con-
ference, Bretton Woods, N.H., U.S.A., July 
I to July 22, I944· Final A ct. London, 
H.M. Stationery Office, I944· 70p. (C,md. 
6546.) . 

United Nations Monetary and Financial Con-
ference, Bretton Woods, N.H., U.S.A., July 
I to July 22, 1944· Documents Supplementary 
to the Final A ct. London~ H.M. Stationery 
Office [I945J 24P· (Cmd. 6597.) 

The agreements became operative Dec. 
27, 1945, only a few days before the dead-
line set at Bretton Woods, when twenty-
nine countries representing 65 per cent of 
the total quotas allotted by the agreements 
for the bank and the fund had ratified the 
Bretton Woods instrument. The United 
States, as the largest contributor, then called 
a preparatory conference for setting up the 
organization for the world fund and bank 
at Wilmington Island, Savannah, Ga., 
which lasted from March 8 to 18, 1946. 
Two full sessions of the boards of governors 
were held. 

A journal was issued during the confer-
ence, but of the conference documents, only 
the following have come to hand so far : 

World Fund and Bank. Inaugural Meeting. 
[Savannah, Ga.] Fund Documents I-JO. 
[n.p., 1946] Mimeographed. 

UNESCO 

At the invitation of the British Govern-
ment, representatives of forty-four United 
Nations met in London from Nov. 1 to 16, 
1945, to discuss the adoption of a draft 
constitution for educational and cultural 
collaboration between the United Nations. 
This document had been prepared by the 

145 



Conference of Allied Ministers of Educa-
·tion in cooperation with United States edu-
cational authorities. The text of the draft 
constitution may be found in: 

Proposed Et/ucational and Cultural Organiza-
tion of the United Nations. Washington, 
Government Printing Office, 1945. 27p. 
(Department of State Publication 23~2.) 

The London Conference ended on No-
vember 16 with the adoption of the draft 
constitution of UNESCO, whereby the sig-
natories pledged themselves to collaborate 
in the advancement of mutual knowledge 
and understanding of peoples; to give fresh 
impulse to popular education and to the 
spread of culture; and to maintain increase 
and diffuse knowledge. The or~anizatio~ 
was formally established in November 1946, 
when the first general conference was held 
in Paris. 

The early documents of the United N a-
tions Conference for the Establishment of 
an Educational and Cultural Organization 
were in the form of mimeographed papers, 
solely for the use of the delegations. The 
final documents comprise the final act, the 
constitution of the United Nations Educa-
tional, Scientific, and Cultural Organiza-
tion, and an instrument establishing a 
preparatory educational, scientific, and cul-
tural commission, also several resolutions. 
They were issued in the United States as: 

"the defenses of peace": Documents Relating 
to UNESCO, the United Nations Educa-
tional, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. 

:Bt. I. Washington, Government Printing 
Office, 1946. 31p. (Department of State 
,Publication 2457, Conference Series So.) 

And in Great Britain as: 

Final Act of the United Nations Conference 
for the Establishment of an Educational, 
Scientific, and Cultural Organization. (With 
related documents.) London, Nov. 16, 1945. 
London, H.M. Stationery Office, 1945. 25p. 
(Cmd. 6711.) Miscellaneous No. 16 (1945) 

UNRRA 

UNRRA is a wartime agency established 
by virtue of an agreement signed in Wash-
ington' Nov. 9, 1943, by representatives of 
forty-four countries. Its purpose is limited 
strictly to relief and immediately n~eded 
rehabilitation, not long-term reconstruction. 

Due to UNRRA's temporary character, 
an organic connection with the United N a-· 
tiops is not possible at this stage, but there 
is nevertheless close cooperation. The pub-: 
licatinns of UNRRA have been fully de-
scribed by Olive L. Sawyer in an article 
entitled "Information Please, on UNRRA," 
which appeared in The Booklist~ July 15, 
1945, p. 328-31. 

All the more important early publications 
by and about UNRRA will be found in: 

Seluted Reading List on United Nations Re-
lief and Rehabilitation Administration, Pre-
pared by the United Nations Information 
0 /fice in Consultation with the United N a-
tions Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. 
New York [1945], a 10-page· folder, with its 
supplement _[1946], an 8-page folder. 

146 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES