Identification of Contracting States

Printer-friendly version Send by email

Countries that have adopted the CISG and information on its status and application

Current status

The CISG is the uniform international sales law of countries that account for over three-quarters of all world trade.

Specific identification of each of the countries that have subscribed to the CISG

Effective dates and declarations or reservations, if any, applicable to each

Trends

At the United Nations Diplomatic Conference which adopted the CISG, "62 states took part: 22 European and other developed Western states, 11 socialist, 11 South-American, 7 African and 11 Asian countries; in other words, roughly speaking, 22 Western, 11 socialist and 29 third world countries". Eörsi, 31 Am. J. Comp. L. 335 (1983). All of these "blocs" are represented in the Table of Contracting States. The text the delegates to the Diplomatic Conference unanimously approved came into effect in 1988. Its subsequent ratification pace has been comparable to that of a prior United Nations convention on international commercial law - - on arbitral awards, the 1958 New York Convention. Arbitration is relevant to the CISG because a high proportion of all negotiated international sales contracts contain an arbitration clause.

Ratifications of conventions on international commercial law normally proceed at a glacial pace. The New York Arbitral Convention was a notable exception to this rule. The CISG is proving to be a similar exception to this rule. If the current trend continues, the CISG will in time be subscribed to by over 100 countries.

General information on the application of the CISG

The CISG is the domestic law of each Contracting State identified in the Table of Contracting States. Important conclusions and recommendations follow from this:

In these two situations -- contracting parties from different Contracting States, and a contract between a party from a Contracting State and a party from a non-Contracting State -- the relevant CISG provisions are Articles 1(1)(a), 1(1)(b) and 95 (see the Annotated Text of Article 1 for further information on this subject; see the data accompanying the Table of Contracting States to identify the several Contracting States that have made Article 95 declarations).