Abstract

Abstract International mass claims programs are not a new phenomenon. Large-scale claims programs, known as mixed arbitral tribunals and mixed claims commissions, were a standard method of resolving international claims in the late nineteenth century and after World War I. The Boxer Commission, the United States-Mexican Claims Commission, the United States-German Mixed Claims Commission, and many other mixed arbitral tribunals and claims commissions were created during that era. For a number of reasons, international claims commissions “fell out of fashion” after World War II.

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