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Title: Individuals and international law


1
Individuals and international law
  • Lecture 21
  • March 6

2
ASSIGNMENTS-1
  • Monday, March 9
  • Individuals as subjects of intl law - Continued
  • The UN and Human Rights Law
  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights -at the
    back of our textbook
  • International Covenant on Civil and Political
    Rights
  • http//www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm
  • International Covenant on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights
  • http//www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_cescr.htm
  • Soering Case

3
ASSIGNMENTS-2
  • International Criminal Law p.395
  • ICC http//www.icc-cpi.int/Menus/ICC/
  • Rome Statute of the ICC http//www.icc-cpi.int/NR
    /rdonlyres/EA9AEFF7-5752-4F84-BE94-0A655EB30E16/0/
    Rome_Statute_English.pdf
  • You need to read Articles 1-21, at least.
  • Find out which article states that ICC takes
    cases where the state is unwilling or unable to
    prosecute
  • Who are the judges of the ICC -
    http//www.icc-cpi.int/chambers/judges.htmlfdd

4
ASSIGNMENTS-3
  • Wednesday, April 1 Guest Speaker
  • Professor Kanner Terrorism and International
    Law
  • Attendance compulsory
  • Today
  • Individuals and International Law
  • Individuals as objects of intl law
  • - Review Nottebohm Case
  • Individuals as subjects of intl law
  • Assignment find a right for individuals in the
    Universal Declaration and then find the
    correlative right in one of the covenants.

5
International Criminal Law
  • Which of the following categories is NOT included
    in the definition of genocide?
  • A. Race
  • B. Ethnicity
  • C. Gender
  • D. Nationality
  • E. Religion

6
INDIVIDUALSAs Objects of intl law
  • individuals could be objects of state v. state
    litigation.
  • State protection and state responsibility
  • Limitations
  • - only protected by their national states
  • - national links extended to corporations
  • - leaves nationals open to abuse by their own
    states not practical to imagine a state
    protecting its own natl against itself in intl
    law.

7
Nottebohm Case
  • Issue May a state legitimately protect a
    national who doesnt have real and effective ties
    to that state?
  • Whether the naturalization thus granted could be
    validly invoked against Guatemala and therefore
    entitled L. to seize the Court of a claim
    relating to him.

8
traditional concept of intl law
  • governing relations betw. states did not
    cover the relationship betw states and
    individuals an offense to an alien was
    considered an offense only to the aliens native
    state. The modern intl law of human rights
    makes nationality irrelevant.
  • A states treatment of individuals in its
    territory was considered a domestic affair not
    an intl law matter. Except aliens.

9
Post WWII
  • modern concept of intl human rights reaction
    to the Holocaust- human rights became a matter of
    intl concern, not just a matter left solely to
    each state.
  • An important outcome of the Nuremberg trials
    that there are individual international rights
    and obligations that transcend state boundaries.

10
UN Charter
  • UN Charter Art. 1, para.3 one of its principle
    purposes the promotion and protection of human
    rights.
  • UN Charter Art. 55 and 56 foundation of modern
    human rights law.
  • Quick emergence of the rules of intl human rights
    law
  • But development of effective intl hum rights
    legal process more gradual
  • - creating enforcement mechanisms at the level
    of UN
  • - regional human rights systems, especially
    Europe

11
International Bill of Rightshttp//www.unhchr.ch/
html/intlinst.htm
  • 1. Universal Declaration on Human Rights 1948
    UNGA adopted it unanimously
  • 2. Intl Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
    1966 US is a party
  • 3. Int Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
    Rights 1966 US not a party
  • Optional Protocol to the Civil and Political
    Covenant US not a party
  • Second Optional Protocol to the Civil and
    Political Covenant Aiming at the Abolition of the
    Death Penalty - US not a party

12
Treaty-based and charter-based bodies
  • Treaty-based
  • Human Rights Committee
  • - Art. 28 International Covenant on Civil and
    Political Rights
  • Charter-based Rights
  • Commission on Human Rights
  • - established by ECOSOC 1946
  • Replace by the Human Rights Council

13
International Human Rights Law
  • 1st generation of rights
  • Intl Covenant on Civil and polit rights
  • 2nd generation of rights
  • Int Covenant on economic, social, and cultural
    rights
  • 3rd generation rights
  • no covenant - collective rights to peace,
    development, and a healthy environment
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