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Fragmentation is one of the major debates within international law,
but no detailed case studies have been made to show the problems
that it creates, and how they can be addressed. This book asks
whether the growing number of international judicial bodies render
decisions that are largely consistent with one another, which
factors influence this (in)consistency, and what this tells us
about the development of international law by international courts
and tribunals. It answers these questions by focusing on three
areas of law: genocide, immunities, and the use of force, as in
each of these areas different international judicial entities have
dealt with cases stemming from the same situation and set of facts.
The work focuses on four main courts: the International Court of
Justice (ICJ), the International Criminal Court (ICC), the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY),
and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), which
often interpret, apply, and develop the same legal principles,
despite their different mandates and functions. It argues that
judicial fragmentation is damaging to the international legal
system, as coherent and compatible pronouncements on the law by
international courts are vital to retaining the confidence of the
international community. Ultimately, the book makes a plea for the
importance of judicial integration for the stability and
reliability of the international legal system.
Revised and updated to include recent developments since 2013, the
third edition of The Law of State Immunity provides a detailed
guide to the operation of the international rule of State immunity
which bars one State's national courts from exercising criminal or
civil jurisdiction over claims made against another State. Building
on the analysis of its two previous editions, it reviews relevant
material at both international and national levels with particular
attention to US and UK law; the 2004 UN Convention on
Jurisdictional Immunities of the State and its Property (not yet in
force), and also seeks to assess the significance of recent changes
in the evolution of the law. Although the restrictive doctrine of
immunity is now widely observed by which foreign States may be sued
in national courts for their commercial transactions, the immunity
rule remains controversial, not only by reason of the recognition
of a single State's right to deny a remedy for a wrong - China, a
major trading State, continues to adhere to the absolute bar - but
also by the exclusion of any reparation or relief for the
commission on the orders of a State of grave human rights
violations. The complexity and moral challenge of the issues is
illustrated by high profile cases such as Pinochet, Amerada Hess,
Saudi Arabia v Nelson and more recently NML v Argentina in national
courts; Al-Adsani v UK and Jones v UK in the European Court of
Human Rights; and Judgments of the International Court of Justice
in Arrest Warrant, Djibouti v France and most recently in the
Jurisdictional Immunities of the State, which, particularly since
the 2014 contrary ruling of the Italian Constitutional Court, has
attracted strong juristic criticism. The expanding extraterritorial
jurisdiction of national courts with regard to torture in disregard
of pleas of act of State and nonjusticiability as in Belhaj and
Rahmatullah offers a further challenge to the exclusionary nature
and continued observance of State immunity. Recent developments in
key areas are examined, including: impleading; public policy and
non-justiciability; universal civil jurisdiction for reparation for
international crimes; the application of the employment exception
to embassies and diplomats; immunity from enforcement and
procedural measures; immunity of State officials, and tensions
between national constitutional requirements and superior
international norms.
The doctrine of state immunity bars a national court from
adjudicating or enforcing claims against foreign states. This
doctrine, the foundation for high-profile national and
international decisions such as those in the Pinochet case and the
Arrest Warrant cases, has always been controversial. The reasons
for the controversy are many and varied. Some argue that state
immunity paves the way for state violations of human rights. Others
argue that the customary basis for the doctrine is not a sufficient
basis for regulation and that codification is the way forward.
Furthermore, it can be argued that even when judgments are made in
national courts against other states, the doctrine makes
enforcement of these decisions impossible. This fully restructured
new edition provides a detailed analysis of these issues in a more
clear and accessible manner. It provides a nuanced assessment of
the development of the doctrine of state immunity, including a
general comprehensive overview of the plea of immunity of a foreign
state, its characteristics, and its operation as a bar to
proceedings in national courts of another state. It includes a
coherent history and justification of the plea of state immunity,
demonstrating its development from the absolute to the restrictive
phase, arguing that state immunity can now be seen to be developing
into a third phase which uses immunity allocate adjudicative and
enforcement jurisdictions between the foreign and the territorial
states. The United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities
of states and their Property is thoroughly assessed. Through a
detailed examination of the sources of law and of English and US
case law, and a comparative analysis of other types of immunity,
the authors explore both the law as it stands, and what it could
and should be in years to come.
The right to a fair trial is the most litigated human right in the
world. Understanding the right requires reference not only to its
interpretation by courts, treaty bodies, rapporteurs, experts, and
scholars, but also to the preparatory work of the treaty (travaux
preparatoires) and the circumstances of its conclusion. This volume
brings together for the first time the complete travaux to Article
14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
with reference to the discussion regarding other articles where
relevant. It traces the evolution of the text over more than a
decade of the drafting process through a number of United Nations
bodies. The materials reveal a lengthy and complex process of
drafting the Covenant, the intentions of the delegates regarding
the interpretation of certain provisions, and those issues that
they left open for states parties to decide through their practice.
This is a companion volume to The Right to a Fair Trial in
International Law (OUP 2020).
Fragmentation is one of the major debates within international law,
but no detailed case studies have been made to show the problems
that it creates, and how they can be addressed. This book asks
whether the growing number of international judicial bodies render
decisions that are largely consistent with one another, which
factors influence this (in)consistency, and what this tells us
about the development of international law by international courts
and tribunals. It answers these questions by focusing on three
areas of law, genocide, immunities, and the use of force, as in
each of these areas different international judicial entities have
dealt with cases stemming from the same situation and set of facts.
The work focuses on four main courts: the International Court of
Justice (ICJ), the International Criminal Court (ICC), the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY),
and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), which
often interpret, apply, and develop the same legal principles,
despite their different mandates and functions. It argues that
judicial fragmentation is damaging to the international legal
system, as coherent and compatible pronouncements on the law by
international courts are vital to retaining the confidence of the
international community. Ultimately, the book makes a plea for the
importance of judicial integration for the stability and
reliability of the international legal system.
Human dignity is a classical concept in public international law,
and a core element of the human rights machinery built after the
Second World War. This book reflects on the past, present and
future of the concept of human dignity, focusing on the role of
international lawyers in shaping the idea and their potential and
actual role in protecting the rights of certain vulnerable groups
of contemporary societies, such as migrant women at risk of
domestic servitude, the LGB community and indigenous peoples.
The United Nations, whose specialized agencies were the subject of
an Appendix to the 1958 edition of Oppenheim's International Law:
Peace, has expanded beyond all recognition since its founding in
1945.This volume represents a study that is entirely new, but
prepared in the way that has become so familiar over succeeding
editions of Oppenheim. An authoritative and comprehensive study of
the United Nations' legal practice, this volume covers the formal
structures of the UN as it has expanded over the years, and all
that this complex organization does. All substantive issues are
addressed in separate sections, including among others, the
responsibilities of the UN, financing, immunities, human rights,
preventing armed conflicts and peacekeeping, and judicial matters.
In examining the evolving structures and ever expanding work of the
United Nations, this volume follows the long-held tradition of
Oppenheim by presenting facts uncoloured by personal opinion, in a
succinct text that also offers in the footnotes a wealth of
information and ideas to be explored. It is book that, while making
all necessary reference to the Charter, the Statute of the
International Court of Justice, and other legal instruments, tells
of the realities of the legal issues as they arise in the day to
day practice of the United Nations. Missions to the UN, Ministries
of Foreign Affairs, practitioners of international law, academics,
and students will all find this book to be vital in their
understanding of the workings of the legal practice of the UN.
Research for this publication was made possible by The Balzan
Prize, which was awarded to Rosalyn Higgins in 2007 by the
International Balzan Foundation.
The Right to a Fair Trial in International Lawbrings together the
diverse sources of international law that define the right to a
fair trial in the context of criminal (as opposed to civil,
administrative or other) proceedings. The book provides a
comprehensive explanation of what the right to a fair trial means
in practice under international law and focuses on factual
scenarios that practitioners and judges may face in court. Each of
the book's fourteen chapters examines a component of the right to a
fair trial as defined in Article 14 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights and reviews the case law of regional
human rights courts, international criminal courts as well as UN
human rights bodies. Highlighting both consensus and divisions in
the international jurisprudence in this area, this book provides an
invaluable resource to practitioners and scholars dealing with
breaches of one of the most fundamental human rights.
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