Phone: 334 727 8994, Fax: 334 724 4806.Current-voltage (I-V) characteristics and electroluminescence spectra of several ultraviolet and blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs) emitting nominally at 380, 400, 430, and 468 nm were studied. These diodes exhibited an Ohmic regime at low forward biases; then the current increased sharply as bias increased. Several changes in the slope of logarithmic I-V plots indicated that, I / V x . These changes in the slope were interpreted as single-carrier space-charge-limited (SCL) transport across the diode active region. As bias increased the deep states were filled and for the 400-and 468-nm diodes ideality factors of $2 were obtained. This indicated that, as bias increased the transport mechanism changed from SCL conduction to recombination of injected carriers in the spacecharge region. For the 380-and 430-nm diodes, ideality factors >>2 were obtained, although the observed electroluminescence spectrum indicated substantial radiative recombination. For the diode emitting at 430 nm, several peaks including the major peak at $424 nm appeared to have resulted from transitions between the conduction-band edge and deep states, identified from the I-V characteristics, likely to be associated with Zn doping of the InGaN active region. Deep states in the other diodes appeared to be ineffective in the radiative recombination process.