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Member countries
When the government
of a State decides that it will be bound by the provisions of CITES,
it can 'join' the Convention by making a formal declaration to this
effect in writing to the Depositary Government, which is the Government
of Switzerland. Once a document containing this declaration has
been received by the Depositary, through the diplomatic channel,
the Convention enters into force for the State concerned 90 days
later (see Article XXII).
A State for which the Convention has entered into force is called
a Party to CITES. Currently there are 175 Parties. The two links
below provide the:
A State that
is a Party to CITES may withdraw from the Convention at any time
by a process of denunciation (see Article XXIV).
This has happened only once in the history of the Convention with the United Arab
Emirates acceding to the Convention on 21 November 1974 but withdrawing from it on
27 January 1988. However the United Arab Emirates became a Party to the Convention
again on 9 May 1990.
The process of making a declaration to be bound by the provisions of CITES is called
‘ratification’, ‘acceptance’, ‘approval’ or ‘accession’. Ratification, acceptance and
approval are legally equivalent actions but are only applicable in relation to the States
that signed the Convention when it was open for signature, between 3 March 1973 (when it
was concluded) and 31 December 1974. (Acceptance and approval are the actions taken by
certain States when, at national level, constitutional law does not require a treaty to
be ‘ratified’.) All States that had signed the Convention have now ratified, accepted or
approved it. The term ‘accession’ is used in relation to the States that
did not sign the Convention (see Articles XIX,
XX and XXI).
It should be noted that the number of Parties to CITES may fluctuate because of
geopolitical changes such as the unification of two Parties (for instance the
unification of the Federal Republic of Germany and of the German Democratic
Republic on 3 October 1990) or the division of a State into two or more separate
States (for instance the division of Czechoslovakia on 1 January 1993 into the Czech
Republic and Slovakia).
The Conference of the Parties to CITES, which is the supreme decision-making body
of the Convention and comprises all its member States, has adopted two amendments to
the original text of the Convention, as made possible under Article XVII
of the Convention. The first amendment was adopted at Bonn (Germany) on 22 June 1979, and entered into force
on 13 April 1987. The second was adopted at Gaborone (Botswana) on 30 April 1983, but has
yet to be accepted by a sufficient number of States then party to CITES to come into effect.
The two links below provide further information on these amendments and on the Parties that
have accepted them.
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