Is there a hierarchy of norms?? ?In what direction is the IL system heading? How does IL compare with domestic law?? minimun
From the book Material: Address the following questions:
Is there a hierarchy of norms?
In what direction is the IL system heading?
How does IL compare with domestic law?
minimun word count 300 word
cite and reference
CHAPTER 5 :
SUBJECTS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:
LEGAL PERSONALITY
Participation + Community Acceptance
→International Personality
different entities will possess different rights and
duties enforceable at law
Individuals & companies become ‘legal persons’
possessing the certain rights and duties.
Having a Legal personality is crucial.
EACH POSSESSING A DISTINCT LEGAL
PERSONALITY
The law determines the scope and nature of
personality
The status
determinative of your powers and
obligations
capacity
link together the status of a person with
certain rights and duties.
LEGAL PERSONALITY IN INTERNATIONAL
LAW A range of factors need to be examined
International personality =
participation + some form of community
acceptance.
Wide range of participants:
States
international organizations
regional organizations
non-governmental organizations
public companies
private companies
Individuals
STATES
the most important legal persons
maintain the primary focus for the social activity of
humankind → international law.
positivist:
only states are subjects of international law.
CREATION OF STATEHOOD:
Montevideo Convention on Rights and Duties of States,
1933:
provides the most widely accepted formulation of the
criteria of statehood in international law
state as an international person should possess the
following qualifications:
a permanent population:
a defined territory:
government;
Capacity to enter into relations with other states’.
SELF-DETERMINATION AND THE CRITERIA
OF STATEHOOD
The evolution of self-determination has affected
the standard necessary as far as the actual
exercise of authority.
New Guidelines for recognition of new states
requiring:
the need to respect Rule of law
Democracy
Respect for human rights
Guarantees of minority rights
RECOGNITION
Recognition may be viewed as:
Constitutive or Declaratory:
The constitutive theory of statehood :
a state exists exclusively via recognition by other states
requires "diplomatic recognition" or merely "recognition of existence"
The declaratory theory of statehood:
an entity becomes a state as soon as it meets the minimal criteria for statehood.
Question: "can an entity become a state without depending on the actions [i.e., recognitions] of existing states.?
EXTINCTION OF STATEHOOD
Merger
Absorption
Dismemberment of an existing state
Annexation (historical)
Usually governments disappear, BUT it is
rather rarer for states to become extinct.
THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF STATES
Draft Declaration on the Rights and Duties of
States prepared in 1949 by the International Law
Commission
1-Independence: or sovereignty
the capacity of a state to provide for its own well-
being and development free from the domination
of other states, providing it does not impair or
violate their legitimate rights.
international law dictates the scope and content
of the independence of states and not the states
themselves individually and unilaterally.
Declaration on Principles of International Law
Concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation
among States adopted in October 1970 by the
United Nations General Assembly emphasized that:
[n]o state or group of states has the right to
intervene, directly or indirectly, for any reason
whatever, in the internal or external affairs of any
other state. Consequently, armed intervention and
all other forms of interference or attempted threats
against the personality of the state or against its
political, economic and cultural elements, are in
violation of international law.
2-Equality
States, irrespective of size or power, have the same juridical
capacities and functions, and are likewise entitled to one vote
in the United Nations General Assembly.
1970 Declaration on Principles of International Law:
(P155)
States are juridically equal:
States enjoy rights inherent in full sovereignty
Territorial integrity and political independence are
sacred
Can freely choose/develop its
political/social/economic/cultural systems
3-Peaceful co-existence
mutual respect for each other’s territorial
integrity and sovereignty
mutual non-aggression and non-interference in
each other’s affairs
the principle of equality.
This idea was expanded in various resolutions of
the United Nations.
Principles as execution of international
obligations in good faith with non-aggression
PROTECTORATES AND PROTECTED
STATES
Protectorate: entity enters into relationship
with a state that results in separate
international personality, but NOT
statehood
Protected state: Where two states retaining
their status as separate states but enter into
a treaty relationship that may give one state
the right to act on another’s territory
FEDERAL STATES
There are various forms of federation or
confederation
According to the relative distribution of
power between the central and local
organs.
degree of authority and competence with
the component units
division of powers
SUI GENERIS TERRITORIAL
ENTITIES/MANDATED AND TRUST
TERRITORIES
UN Trusteeship Council / mandate system
Condominium
International administration of territories
Taiwan
The ‘Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus’
(TRNC)
The Saharan Arab Democratic Republic
Various secessionist claimants:
Somaliland: 17 may 1991
Moldova: Moldavian Republic of Transdniestria’
23 June 1990
Associations of states
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INTERNATIONAL LAW FOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
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1
INTERNATIONAL LAW FOR INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
Baş ak Çalı
3 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford ox2 6dp
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
International law for international relations / Başak Çali. p. cm. ISBN 978-0-19-955842-1 1. International law. 2. International relations. I. Çali, Başak, 1974– KZ3410.I5794 2010 341–dc22
2009042108
Typeset by MPS Limited, A Macmillan Company Printed in Great Britain on acid-free paper by
CPI Antony Rowe
ISBN 978–0–19–955842–1
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Contents—Summary
Preface xvi
Guided tour of Learning Features xviii
Guided tour of the Online Resource Centre xx
Contributors xxii
Abbreviations xxv
List of boxes xxviii
List of tables xxxi
List of case studies xxxii
PART I STUDYING INTERNATIONAL LAW
1 International law and international relations: foundations for interdisciplinary study 3
Başak Çalı
2 Perspectives on international law in international relations 25
Fiona B. Adamson and Chandra Lekha Sriram
3 Basic principles of international law: a historical perspective 46
Antony Anghie
4 Perspectives on international relations in international law 71
Başak Çalı
PART II IDENTIFYING INTERNATIONAL LAW
5 International treaties 99
Emmanuel Voyiakis
6 Customary international law 122
Jason Beckett
7 Non- governmental organizations and international law 141
Meghna Abraham
8 International courts and tribunals 165
Juan M. Amaya-Castro
vi Contents
PART III TOPIC S IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
9 States and international law: the problems of self- determination, secession, and recognition 191
Christopher J. Borgen
10 Use of force in international law 213
Nigel Rodley and Başak Çalı
11 International humanitarian law 234
Elizabeth Griffi n and Başak Çalı
12 International criminal law 258
Paola Gaeta
13 International human rights law 281
Başak Çalı
14 International law for environmental protection 306
David M. Ong
15 World trade and international law 330
Thomas Sebastian
16 Global social justice and international law 351
Saladin Meckled-Garcia
CONCLUSION
17 International law in international relations: what are the prospects for the future? 379
Başak Çalı
Table of cases 395
Table of major multilateral international treaties and documents 397
Glossary 399
References 409
Index 421
Detailed contents
Preface xvi
Guided tour of Learning Features xviii
Guided tour of the Online Resource Centre xx
Contributors xxii
Abbreviations xxv
List of boxes xxviii
List of tables xxxi
List of case studies xxxii
PART I STUDYING INTERNATIONAL LAW
1 International law and international relations: foundations for interdisciplinary study 3
Introduction 4
What is international law? 5
The relationship between international law and international relations 7
Are international relations and international law two separate disciplines? 7
How does the knowledge produced in international relations and international law overlap, confl ict, and co-depend? 12
At what point and in what way does international law enter into international relations research? 16
Why study international law? 20
Conclusion 23
2 Perspectives on international law in international relations 25
Introduction 26
Realism 27
Theory 27
Actors 28
Processes 29
Liberalism 30
Theory 30
Actors 32
Processes 33
viii Detailed contents
Institutionalism 34
Theory 34
Actors 34
Processes 36
Constructivism 37
Theory 37
Actors 38
Processes 39
Marxism, Feminism, and Critical Theory 41
Theory 41
Actors 42
Processes 42
Conclusion 43
3 Basic principles of international law: a historical perspective 46
Introduction 47
The subject matter of a history of international law 47
The birth of modern international law: the sixteenth century 50
The beginnings of Empire 50
The Peace of Westphalia and Westphalian sovereignty: 1648 52
The Congress of Vienna: international law from 1815–1914 54
The League of Nations: international law from 1919–1939 57
The United Nations: 1945 to the present 60
The end of the Cold War: international law from 1989 64
Conclusion 68
4 Perspectives on international relations in international law 71
Introduction 71
What is international law? 73
Positivism about international law 74
Natural law descriptions of international law 77
International law as a process 79
Critical legal studies and international law 80
The purpose of international law 82
The relevance of theories of international law in international relations 86
The empirical relevance of international law 87
Detailed contents ix
The relevance of international law in the contemporary world 88
Conclusion 89
PART II IDENTIFYING INTERNATIONAL LAW
5 International treaties 99
Introduction 100
Why do states make treaties? 101
The relationship between treaties, customary international law, and the concept of ius cogens 103
Is there a hierarchy of sources in international law? 103
The concept of ius cogens in the Vienna Convention on the Law of the Treaties 104
The making of treaties 105
Negotiation 106
Representation and ‘full powers’ 107
Adoption, authentication, and expression of consent to be bound 107
Entry into force 108
Universality or integrity? Reservations to treaties 108
What are reservations? 110
Application, interpretation, and the position of third states 112
Third states 113
Temporal and territorial application of treaties 113
The interpretation of treaties 114
Amending a treaty 114
Ending international treaties 115
Invalidity 116
Termination and suspension 117
Settling disputes 118
Conclusion 119
6 Customary international law 122
Introduction 122
What rules govern the formation of CIL? The conduct- centred model 124
The CIL approach to state behaviour: states as agents with legal motivations 125
What are the material sources of CIL? 129
x Detailed contents
State actions 129
United Nations General Assembly Resolutions 130
Treaties and other texts 131
Identifying particular rules of CIL: the tipping point 132
CIL in the real world 134
The compatibility of CIL with ius cogens norms 135
(Why) do states comply with CIL? 136
Factors contributing to compliance with CIL: state identity and systemic benefi ts 136
Conclusion 138
7 Non- governmental organizations and international law 141
Introduction: non- governmental organizations in a terrain occupied by states 142
Motivations for NGO involvement in international law 143
Overcoming domestic politics or barriers 144
Economies of scale 145
Better forum for negotiations 145
Opportunities to gradually increase the scope or level of the commitment 145
Enhancing the legitimacy of NGOs 145
Mechanisms for international enforcement 146
NGOs and sources of international law 146
NGO participation in intergovernmental organizations and processes 149
The role of NGOs in the development of international law 151
Initiating new standards 151
NGO participation in negotiations, drafting, and entry into force of treaties 154
How can we explain NGOs’ ability to infl uence the process? 156
The role of NGOs in the enforcement of international law 157
Publicize non-compliance 158
Clarifi cation of what is non-compliance 158
Lobby for action in response to non-compliance 159
Evaluating NGO involvement in the development of international law 159
Redressing a democratic defi cit? 159
How do we gauge how effective NGOs have been? 161
Conclusion 161
Detailed contents xi
8 International courts and tribunals 165
Introduction: international courts in contemporary life 166
What are international courts? 166 Types of international courts 167
How international courts are formed 171
Who can bring a case to an international court? 171
What is the effect of international judicial decisions? 176
What are the functions of international courts? 178
Dispute settlement 178
Enforcing international law 179
Identifying and developing international law 180
When are international courts successful? 182
The future of international courts and tribunals 183
Conclusion 184
PART III TOPIC S IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
9 States and international law: the problems of self- determination, secession, and recognition 191
Introduction 192
International law and statehood 193
Statehood and sovereignty 193
What is the recognition of statehood? 195
International law of self-determination 197
Self- determination: from political rhetoric to legal right 197
Applying self- determination to international relations: who or what has a right of self-determination? 199
Applying self- determination to international relations: the territorial integrity of states 200
The problem of secession in international law and international relations 200
The majority view: no right of secession 201
The reply: the ‘extreme cases’ argument 203
Secession and state practice 204
Recognition and secession 205
Conclusion 207
xii Detailed contents
10 Use of force in international law 213
Introduction 213
The general framework on the use of force in international law 215
Self-defence 217
When can states resort to the right of self-defence? 218
What circumstances justify self-defence? 219
The conduct question 220
The use of force, self- defence, and non- state actors 221
Unilateral humanitarian intervention? 222
The collective security system under the United Nations Charter 224
The power of international law on the use of force: rhetoric or controlling? 228
Conclusion 231
11 International humanitarian law 234
Introduction 234
What is international humanitarian law and how is it made? 236
IHL treaties 238
Customary IHL 239
The nature of international humanitarian law 240
IHL and actor-centricism 240
International and internal armed confl icts 241
IHL and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) 242
Purposes of international humanitarian law and its basic principles 242
Compliance with international humanitarian law 249
Motivations of states and IHL: why do states agree to rules that govern armed confl ict? 249
Indicators of compliance 251
Non- compliance and accountability 252
Non- state actors and compliance with international humanitarian law 253
Conclusion 254
12 International criminal law 258
Introduction 258
The birth and evolution of international criminal law 260
The fi rst phase: the Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals 260
The second phase: the adoption of treaties for the repression of international crimes by states 262
Detailed contents xiii
The turning point: the establishment of international criminal courts 263
The core crimes and the rationale behind their international criminalization 265
War crimes 265
Crimes against humanity and genocide 267
The reasons for the different path of the international criminalization of war crimes with respect to crimes against humanity and genocide 270
The enforcement of international criminal law at the international level 271
The ad hoc criminal tribunals and the ICC: an overview 271
The United Nations Security Council and the International Criminal Court 272
The pros and cons of international criminal proceedings 274
The relationship betw
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