International Law.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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merchants), modernized the rights of neutrals during maritime war, and required blockades to be effective.
The Declaration of Paris also initiated the practice of allowingnations other than the original signatories to accede (become a party to) to an agreement.
In 1864 a conference convened in Geneva, Switzerland, at the invitation of the Swiss government.
The conference approved a convention for the proper treatment ofwounded soldiers on the battlefield and the protection of medical personnel; many nations subsequently acceded to this convention, the first Geneva Convention.
Thepeace conferences held in 1899 and 1907 in The Hague, the Netherlands, resulted in a number of conventions designed to avoid or mitigate the rigors of war.
The 1899conference adopted a Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes, which created the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague to settle disputesbetween nations ( see Hague Conferences).
B Customary Law
Customary international law is unwritten and derives from the actual practices of nations over time.
To be accepted as law, the custom must be long-standing,widespread, and practiced in a uniform and consistent way among nations.
One example of customary international law is a nation’s right to use the high seas forfishing, navigation, overflight, and submarines.
Treaties represent another source of customary law.
Although treaties generally bind only those countries that ratify them, customs may be deduced from the rules andstatements contained in treaties.
These new customs may be considered binding even on those states that did not sign and ratify the original treaty.
Whether or notthey are embodied in a written treaty, customs become part of international law because of continued acceptance by the great majority of nations.
Some customary international law has been codified in recent years.
For example, the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, which was approved in 1969 and tookeffect in 1980, codified the customary law that treaties between sovereign states are binding on their signatories and must be followed in good faith.
C General Principles
The phrase “general principles of law” appeared in the statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, established in 1921, three years after the end of WorldWar I (1914-1918).
The court was directed to decide disputes brought before it on the basis of existing treaty law and customary international law.
Some of thediplomats and lawyers drafting the statute of the court feared, however, that disputes might arise over new international issues for which there would be no settled custom or applicable treaty.
They decided, and the nations voting for the statute agreed, to add a third source of law—“general principles of law recognized by civilized nations”—to allow the court to draw upon widely recognized legal principles in national law.
In this way, the court would not have to refuse to settle a dispute because ofthe absence of international law.
General principles that have been applied by the court and its successor, the United Nations International Court of Justice, include the“clean hands” doctrine (it is improper to accuse someone of misconduct that the accuser has also engaged in), the principle that individuals should not be a judge intheir own dispute, and the principle of res judicata (a case that is decided cannot be tried again).
D International Courts and Organizations
Judicial decisions rendered by international courts are important elements in identifying and confirming international legal rules.
The most important international courtsare the UN International Court of Justice, which mainly handles legal disputes between nations, and the International Criminal Court, which prosecutes individuals forgenocide, war crimes, and other serious crimes of international concern.
Resolutions and decisions of the UN and other international organizations now also have a greatimpact on the views and practices of sovereign states, sometimes leading to rapid formation of customary international law.
States have given a very few internationalorganizations, such as the European Union and the UN Security Council, the power to enact directly binding measures.
The first international organizations emerged in the 19th century.
Technological advances such as the telegraph and the telephone, together with a rise in internationaltrade, created a need for permanent international institutions to regulate problems that exceeded national boundaries.
The earliest organizations of this type werespecialized bodies such as the International Telegraphic Union (1865) and the Universal Postal Union (1874).
After World War I European countries created the League of Nations, an organization with a general mandate to maintain peace and prevent war.
The League’scovenant was part of the Treaty of Versailles signed in 1919 to officially end the war.
Pursuant to provisions in the covenant, the Permanent Court of InternationalJustice was established in 1921 as the world’s first international court.
Its role was to decide international disputes that were voluntarily submitted to the court by thenations involved, and to issue advisory opinions on disputes referred to it by the League.
Although the court helped to develop international law, its judges werehampered by the lack of universal agreement on many aspects of international law.
The onset of World War II in 1939 proved the League of Nations ineffective in preventing hostilities.
Equally unsuccessful was the Pact of Paris, also called the Kellogg-Briand Pact, a multilateral treaty renouncing the use of war that had been signed in 1928 and ultimately ratified by more than 60 nations, including Germany and Japan.After World War II ended in 1945 the United Nations replaced the League of Nations, and the International Court of Justice succeeded the Permanent Court ofInternational Justice.
The United Nations Charter created elaborate machinery for maintaining peace and security and for solving disputes among nations.
It also specifically directed theGeneral Assembly to encourage the progressive development and codification of international law.
To carry out this task, the General Assembly created two subsidiaryorgans: the International Law Commission (1947) and the Commission on International Trade Law (1966).
Over the years the International Law Commission hasprepared drafts of treaties codifying and modernizing a number of important topics of international law, including the law of the sea, diplomatic relations, consularrelations, law of treaties between nations, succession of states in respect to treaties, law of treaties between nations and international organizations, immunity of statesfrom the jurisdiction of other states, and the law of international freshwaters.
The Commission on International Trade Law drafts texts on laws concerning internationalcommerce and economic development.
Upon acceptance by the General Assembly, drafts from the commissions usually are submitted to international conferencescalled by the UN for adoption of the respective conventions.
In some instances, the UN has organized conferences to discuss major international issues or to negotiate treaties without prior proposal by the International LawCommission.
The most important example was the third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea, which terminated its work in 1982.
The conference adopted a convention(which came into force in 1994) governing all aspects of the peaceful use of the oceans, including territorial boundaries, navigational rights, and economic jurisdiction(see Freedom of the Seas).
Another example is the 1992 UN Conference on Environment and Development, held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and informally known as the Earth Summit.
The conference produced two major treaties: the Convention on Biological Diversity, which seeks to preserve the world’s biological diversity and promotethe sustainable use of its components; and the Framework Convention on Climate Change, which seeks to limit industrial emissions of gases leading to global warming.Sometimes the UN convenes major conferences to assess progress and problems concerning a specific topic, without adopting a new agreement.
Such conferenceshave been held on human rights and on the status of women worldwide.
A landmark in the development of international law occurred in 1998 at a UN diplomatic conference in Rome, Italy, when 120 countries adopted a treaty to establish theworld’s first permanent international criminal court.
Officially established in 2002, the International Criminal Court (ICC) operates independently of the United Nations.
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