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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 February 2017
The Protocol of Brasilia on dispute resolution, together with the Treaty of Asuncion for the Constitution of a Common Market among Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay (Mercosur) [30 I.L.M. 1044 (1991)] and the Protocol of Ouro Preto on the Institutional Structure of Mercosur [34 I.L.M. 1244 (1995)], forms part of the basic legal framework for the process of economic integration in the Southern cone of Latin America.
* Reproduced from the English translation of the official Spanish text of the Protocol provided by the Government of Argentina. The translation and the Introductory Note were provided to International Legal Materials by Evelina Teubal Alhadeff, Professor of Law at the University of Buenos Aires and I.L.M. Corresponding Editor for Argentina.
[The Treaty Establishing a Common Market Between Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay [known by the Spanish acronym Mercosur] (the Treaty of Asuncion), March 26, 1991, with an Introductory Note by Professor Alhadeff, appears at 30 I.L.M. 1041 (1991), and the Additional Protocol to the Treaty of Asuncion on the Institutional Structure of Mercosur (Protocol of Ouro Preto), December 17, 1994, with an Introductory Note by Professor Alhadeff, appears at 34 I.L.M. 1244 (1995).
[For additional information contact the Mercosur Secretariat, Ricon 575, Piso 12, Montevideo 11000, Uruguay (tel.: 598 2 964 590; fax: 598 2 964 591).]