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Peaceful Co-existence

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Peaceful Co-existence As applied to international courts and tribunals. P.J. Kuijper University of Amsterdam The First Responsibility of International Courts ICJ has ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Peaceful Co-existence


1
Peaceful Co-existence
  • As applied to international courts and tribunals.
  • P.J. Kuijper
  • University of Amsterdam

2
The First Responsibility of International Courts
  • ICJ has a general responsibility for
    international law.
  • All other courts are primarily responsible for
    their Treaty system.
  • Particularly true i.a. for ECJ and WTO DS. They
    have exclusive jurisdiction.
  • Their reflexes tend toward separateness. No
    infection by lesser systems.

3
How to keep ones legal system whole?
  • Our system is a separate system it is
    self-contained.
  • How do you deal with gaps?
  • Have recourse to background international law
  • What about system failure?
  • Go back to general international law of remedies?
  • You could find yourself in the WTO Mexico Soft
    Drinks.
  • Our system/treaty has a different object and
    purpose from your system.
  • Interpret identical provisions differently
    because they are in e different context and have
    a different object and purpose (Cf ECJ in 70s and
    80s in respect of FTAs

4
Is the judgment of the other Court binding?
  • The ECJ is confronted with this question, when
    considering judgments of courts of treaty system
    to which it is a party WTO and EEA.
  • Should the ECJ implement and enforce reports of
    Panels and the AB? The EFTA Court?
  • Cf. ECJ in WTO cases and US Supreme Court in
    Medellin.
  • The character of a rule as non-self-executing is
    not changed by clarification and interpretation
    by a Court.
  • Especially not if the rule is non-self-executing
    for systemic reasons

5
Is the judgment of the other Court binding? 2
  • This is not the right approach it is not a
    question of direct effect of the WTO Agreement or
    of Panel or AB decisions.
  • The question is is the Court bound by the
    decision of the other Court?
  • Any organ of the State or Int Org is bound by a
    judgment that binds the State, especially organs
    that themselves engage the responsibility of the
    State or the Int. Org
  • But it is here that the internal division/balance
    of powers can come in again. Is the judgment of
    the other Court binding?

6
Is the judgment of the other Court binding? 3
  • A parallel with the way national Supreme Courts
    carry out international international judgments
    is more productive.
  • In particular the Gorgulu Case of the German
    Constitutional Court is enlightening.
  • The closer the case before the national court
    matches the precedent decided by the
    international court, the more must the national
    court follow it.
  • In any case the national case must reason with
    the international case sich auseinandersetzen

7
Is the judgment of the other Court binding? 4
  • Judged along those lines
  • The CFI did not do too badly in Ritek
  • The ECJ was below par in Germany bananas and Ikea.

8
What does this mean for the AB?
  • WTO not bound by any treaty with a DS system that
    is authoritative.
  • But what about agreements widely ratified by the
    Member States?
  • Strictly speaking no consequence (?)
  • Different approach ECJ Intertanko.
  • From a different angle not such a different
    outcome from the treaty law approach.
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