This series is comprised of a total of 296 titles (included, but not indvidually numbered: 28 duplicated copies and 2 periodical issues). Brochures, reviews, booklets, documents, maps, pamphlets and reprints that were titled in this series referred to 22 countries. They were written in 12 languages and some have several translations. The period covered in this series ranges between 1917 and 1946, with the majority relating to the 1910s and 1920s. Topics of the publications are peace movements and their worldwide historical development as well as the activities of peace associations and societies. They also include thoughts and opinions of various authors on the question of peace and war and on the concept of the united world and permanent peace which might be accomplished by a universally recognised code of international law or the voluntary establishment of an organization that went beyond the confines of national culture.
Contains petitions against the action of the Turkish Government addressed to the President of the League of Nations Commission of Enquiry in Mosul.
This file contains correspondence, treaty excerpts, and other documents concerning the treatment of minorities in Czechoslovakia. This includes agreements on minority rights as stipulated in the Treaty of St.-Germain-en-Laye, and letters regarding the status of Hungarian minorities - as well as, more specifically, that of Hungarian-speaking Greek Catholic minorities - in the newly-established country of Czechoslovakia.
This file contains petitions submitted to the Minorities Section of the League of Nations regarding the situation of Polish and Jewish minorities in German Upper Silesia, as well as the responses to these petitions by the German government.
In this file may be found petitions and appeals submitted to the Minorities Section of the League of Nations by the Deutscher Volksbund [German People's League] on behalf of the German minority in Polish Upper Silesia, as well as the Polish government's observations on the said documents.
In this file may be found petitions sent to the Minorities Section of the League of Nations by members of the German minority residing in Polish Upper Silesia, as well as the Polish government's responses to the said petitions.