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International Organizations

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Title: International Organizations


1
International Organizations

2
United Nations

3
Six U.N. Organs
  • Security Council
  • Trusteeship Council
  • Economic and Social Council
  • General Assembly
  • Secretariat
  • International Court of Justice

4
Voting in the General Assembly
  • Article 18
  • Each member of the General Assembly shall have
    one vote.
  • Decisions of the General Assembly on important
    questions shall be made by a two-thirds majority
    of the members present and voting. These
    questions shall include recommendations with
    respect to the maintenance of international peace
    and security, the election of the non-permanent
    members of the Security Council, the election of
    the members of the Economic and Social Council,
    the election of members of the Trusteeship
    Council in accordance with paragraph 1 (c) of
    Article 86, the admission of new Members to the
    United Nations, the suspension of the rights and
    privileges of membership, the expulsion of
    Members, questions relating to the operation of
    the trusteeship system, and budgetary questions.
  • Decisions on other questions, including the
    determination of additional categories of
    questions to be decided by a two-thirds majority,
    shall be made by a majority of the members
    present and voting.

5
If We Were to Create a New International
Organization . . .
  • Present Voting Rules in the U.N. General Assembly
  • Possible Options for a New International
    Organization?
  • One member, one vote
  • Certain categories require 2/3 vote
  • Otherwise simple majority
  • Consensus?
  • Base votes on population?
  • Base votes on financial contributions to the
    budget?
  • Should we create a bicameral international
    organization?

6
What else would be different in a new
international organization?
  • Membership in the General Assembly?
  • Security Council?
  • Trusteeship Council?
  • International Court of Justice?

7
1. Some Legal Aspects of International
Organizations
8
International Organizations
  1. The Legal Personality of International
    Organizations
  2. Constitutions of International Organizations as
    Treaties
  3. Membership
  4. Powers of International Organizations
  5. Law-Making By International Organizations
  6. Applicable Law
  7. Responsibilities of International Organizations
  8. Member State Liability for Actions of
    International Organizations
  9. Accountability and Good Governance
  10. Privileges and Immunities of International
    Organizations and Their Representatives
  11. Dissolution
  12. Succession

9
1. The Legal Personality of International
Organizations
10
Legal Personality
  • International Law Commission Draft Articles on
    the Responsibility of International
    Organizations, art. 2
  • an organisation established by a treaty or
    other instrument governed by international law
    and possessing its own legal personality.

11
Legal Personality
  • Personality under international law
  • Personality under domestic law

12
Legal Personality
  • International Court of Justice decision in
    Reparations for Injuries Suffered in the Service
    of the United Nations, 1949 I.C.J. 179
  • The U.N. members, by entrusting certain
    functions to the United Nations, with the
    attendant duties and responsibilities, have
    clothed it with the competence required to enable
    those functions to be effectively discharged.

13
Legal Personality
  • International Court of Justice decision in
    Reparations for Injuries Suffered in the Service
    of the United Nations, 1949 I.C.J. 185
  • The fifty states, representing the vast majority
    of the members of the international community,
    had the power in conformity with international
    law, to bring into being an entity possessing
    objective international personality, and not
    merely personality recognised by them alone.

14
Legal Personality - Domestic
  • Many constitutions of international organizations
    provide that the organization should have
    personality in domestic law to enable it to (for
    example)
  • Contract for goods or services
  • Acquire or dispose of property
  • Institute legal proceedings in local courts
  • Have the legal capacity to exercise its functions

15
Legal Personality - Domestic
  • U.N. Charter art. 104
  • The Organization shall enjoy in the territory of
    each of its Members such legal capacity as may be
    necessary for the exercise of its functions and
    the fulfillment of its purposes.

16
Legal Personality
  • To say that an international organization has
    legal personality does not in itself determine
    the full scope of what that personality entails.
  • The subjects of international law in any legal
    system are not necessarily identical in nature or
    in the extent of their rights, and their nature
    depends on the needs of the community. 1949
    I.C.J. at 330

17
Legal Personality
  • Legal personality should be recognized by members
    of the organization (and host nations), but must
    it also be recognized by non-members?

18
2. Constitutions of International Organizations
as Treaties
19
Constitutions
  • Constituent instruments of international
    organizations have a dual nature
  • They set forth the structure
  • They are treaties between members

20
ICJ Advisory Opinion
  • The constituent instruments of international
    organisations are also treaties of a particular
    type their object is to create new subjects of
    international law endowed with a certain
    autonomy, to which the parties entrust the task
    of realising common goals. Such treaties can
    raise specific problems of interpretation owing,
    inter alia, to their character which is
    conventional and at the same time institutional
    the very nature of the organisation created, the
    objectives which have been assigned to it by its
    founder, the imperatives associated with the
    effective performance of its functions, as well
    as its own practice, are all elements which may
    deserve special attention when the time comes to
    interpret these constituent treaties.
  • Legality of the Use of Nuclear Weapons, 1996
    I.C.J. at 74-75.

21
Interpreting the Constitution (the treaty
establishing the organization)
  • The character of the constitution/treaty (which
    is conventional and at the same time
    institutional)
  • The nature of the organization created
  • The objectives assigned to the organization
  • The importance of effective performance of the
    functions of the organization
  • The organizations own practice

22
3. Membership
23
Membership
  • (1) The membership of an international
    organization consists of the states (and other
    entities) that become members in accordance with
    provisions of the organizations constitution.
  • (2) The organization itself decides questions as
    to representation of a member state (or entity).
  • (3) The organization itself decides questions as
    to succession of a states membership.

24
4. Powers of International Organizations
25
Powers of International Organizations
  • International organizations cannot exercise
    general powers (as can sovereign nations).
  • International organizations are governed by the
    principle of speciality.

26
Powers of International Organizations
  • International organizations are invested by the
    states which create them with powers, the limits
    of which are a function of the common interests
    whose promotion those states entrust to them.
    Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Use by a
    State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, 1996
    I.C.J. 66, 78-79.

27
Powers of International Organizations
  • Powers may be express (in the constituent
    instruments)
  • Powers may be implied (by the purpose for which
    the organization was established, and by state
    practice)

28
Powers of International Organizations
  • Under international law the organization must be
    deemed to have those powers which, though not
    expressly provided in the charter, are conferred
    upon it by necessary implication as being
    essential to the performance of its duties.
    Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Use by a
    State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, 1996
    I.C.J. 66, 78-79.

29
Powers of International Organizations
  • Example ICJ held that the General Assembly
    could validly establish an administrative
    tribunal even without express power to do so in
    the U.N. Charter. Effect of Awards of
    Compensation Made by the U.N. Administrative
    Tribunal, 1954 I.C.J. 47.
  • But note that any attempts to exercise powers in
    contravention of the U.N. Charter would be
    prohibited.

30
Powers of International Organizations
  • Is the action one expressly authorized by the
    constituent instrument?
  • Is the action inconsistent with an express power?
  • Is the action one necessarily intended by the
    member states when they established the
    organization?

31
5. International Law-Making By International
Organizations
32
Law-Making
  • Treaty Negotiations
  • For the organization
  • For the members
  • For non-members
  • Dispute Settlement by Judicial (and
    Quasi-Judicial) Bodies
  • Resolutions
  • Binding?
  • Non-binding?

33
Law-making (Treaties)
  • Can international organizations conclude
    treaties?
  • Article 6 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of
    Treaties between States and International
    Organizations The capacity of an international
    organization to conclude treaties is governed by
    the rules of that organisation.

34
Law-making (Treaties)
  • According to the International Law Commission the
    rules of the organization include
  • Constituent instruments (treaty)
  • Relevant decisions
  • Relevant resolutions and
  • Established practices of the organization.

35
Law-Making
  • Dispute Settlement by Judicial (and
    Quasi-Judicial) Bodies
  • Examples
  • International Court of Justice
  • International Criminal Court
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
    Yugoslavia (ICTY)
  • International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
  • International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
    (ITLOS)
  • World Trade Organization Dispute Settlement Panel
    Decision

36
Law-Making
  • What is the effect of an international judicial
    decision?
  • Does it bind the states?
  • Does it bind the organization?
  • Does it bind other member states?
  • Does it bind non-member states?
  • Does it bind individuals?

37
Law-Making
  • Resolutions
  • Binding?
  • On members?
  • On non-members?
  • Non-binding?
  • Do non-binding resolutions have any legal effect?
  • If not, why do countries and organizations make
    these non-binding resolutions?

38
6. Applicable Law
39
Applicable Law - International
  • The constituent instruments of international
    organizations are generally interpreted by
    international law
  • If the international organization entered into a
    treaty relationship with a particular state (such
    as a headquarters agreement), that agreement
    would also generally be interpreted by
    international law.
  • Possible issues existence, constitution,
    status, membership, representation

40
Applicable Law - Domestic
  • Some issues may be governed by domestic
    (national) law
  • Examples
  • Purchase of property
  • Equipment lease
  • Employment law?

41
International Organizations
  1. The Legal Personality of International
    Organizations
  2. Constitutions of International Organizations as
    Treaties
  3. Membership
  4. Powers of International Organizations
  5. Law-Making By International Organizations
  6. Applicable Law
  7. Responsibilities of International Organizations
  8. Member State Liability for Actions of
    International Organizations
  9. Accountability and Good Governance
  10. Privileges and Immunities of International
    Organizations and Their Representatives
  11. Dissolution
  12. Succession

42
7. Responsibilities of International
Organizations
43
Responsibilities
  • If you create a new organization with legal
    personality, the actions of that organization may
    carry responsibilities.
  • If the organization harms a member state, the
    organization should be called upon to remedy that
    harm.
  • If a member state harms the organization, the
    member state should be called upon to remedy that
    harm.

44
Responsibilities
  • ICJ There is an undeniable right of the
    organization to demand that its members shall
    fulfill the obligations entered into by them in
    the interest of the good working of the
    organization. 1949 I.C.J. at 184.

45
Responsibilities
  • Responsibility is a necessary consequence of
    international personality and the resulting
    possession of international rights and duties.
  • The precise nature of responsibility will
    depend upon the circumstances and analogies to
    the law of state responsibility.
  • The basis of international responsibility is the
    breach of an international obligation and such
    obligations will depend on the situation.

46
Responsibilities
  • Direct breach of an obligation
  • Other direct harm
  • Indirect harm
  • Assisting another state (or another international
    organization) in a wrongful act (where the
    organization knows that the circumstances of the
    act would be wrongful if done directly by the
    international organization itself)

47
8. Member State Liability for Actions of
International Organizations
48
Liability of Member States
  • For injuries or debts of the international
    organization
  • To other member states
  • To non-member states
  • To other international organizations

49
Liability of Member States
  • Starting point in analyzing liability is
    considering the legal personality of the
    organization
  • If an international organization does not possess
    an independent legal personality, liability falls
    upon the member states
  • If the organization has legal personality, that
    implies liability for activities entered into by
    the organization

50
Liability of Member States
  • What kind of liability?
  • Joint and several liability?
  • Was the action under the control of a particular
    state (or group of states)?
  • Did the organization act as an agent of a
    particular state?

51
Liability of Member States
  • What kind of liability?
  • Joint and several liability?
  • Was the action under the control of a particular
    state (or group of states)?
  • Did the organization act as an agent of a
    particular state?
  • If member states act together with an
    international organization in the commission of a
    wrongful act, then it will also be liable.

52
9. Accountability and Good Governance
53
Accountability and Good Governance
  • Following Basic Principles of Good Governance
  • Acting Only in Good Faith
  • Acting Only within the Constitutional Powers of
    the Organization

54
Accountability and Good Governance
  • Transparent Conduct of the Organization, Its
    Subsidiary Organs, and Its Agents
  • Effective Organizational Monitoring
  • Principle of Due Diligence
  • Investigation and Disclosure When Things Go Wrong
  • Safeguards

55
Accountability and Good Governance
  • State reasons for decisions
  • Follow procedures and rules (among other things,
    to prevent abuse of discretionary powers and
    errors of fact or law)
  • Follow principle of objectivity and impartiality

56
10. Privileges and Immunities of International
Organizations and Their Representatives
57
Privileges and Immunities
  • States and their representatives enjoy a variety
    of privileges and immunities
  • International organizations and their
    representatives enjoy them as well
  • Usually sovereigns recognize equality and
    sovereignty of other nations
  • International organizations are unable to grant
    (or withdraw) sovereign immunity as a reciprocal
    gesture

58
Privileges and Immunities
  • The true bases for the immunities accorded to
    international organizations is that they are
    necessitated by the effective exercise of their
    functions.
  • Question as to how you measure the level of
    immunities in the light of such functional
    necessity

59
Privileges and Immunities
  • U.N. Charter art. 105
  • (1) The Organization shall enjoy in the territory
    of each of its members such privileges and
    immunities as are necessary for the fulfillment
    of its purposes
  • (2) Representatives of the members of the United
    Nations and officials of the Organization shall
    similarly enjoy such privileges and immunities as
    are necessary for the independent exercise of
    their functions in connection with the
    Organization.

60
Privileges and Immunities
  • The general provisions of U.N. Charter art. 105
    is supplemented by the General Convention on the
    Privileges and Immunities of the Specialized
    Agencies
  • That General Convention is also supplemented by
    bilateral agreements (particularly host country
    agreements)

61
Privileges and Immunities
  • ICJ Treaty provisions will generally prevail
    over domestic law of a state party to the treaty.
    1988 I.C.J. 33-34.

62
Privileges and Immunities
  • Functional approach to recognizing privileges
    and immunities
  • Reason for granting immunities to international
    organizations was to enable them to pursue their
    functions more effectively and to permit
    organizations to operate free from unilateral
    control over the organization by the host
    country.
  • See, e.g., Mendaro v. World Bank, 717 F.2d 610,
    615-17 (D.C. Cir. 1983).

63
Privileges and Immunities
  • Immunity from personal arrest or detention
  • Immunity from seizure of baggage
  • No liability for words spoken or written in their
    official capacities
  • Security for papers and documents
  • Right to use codes
  • Right to receive papers and documents by courier
    or in sealed bags
  • Exemption from immigration restrictions, alien
    registration, national service obligations
  • Exemptions extended to spouses and family

64
Privileges and Immunities
  • Ability to exchange currency (similar to what is
    allowed for representatives of foreign
    governments on temporary official missions)
  • Immunities for personal baggage (similar to
    diplomatic envoys)
  • Generally all other privileges and immunities
    similar to diplomatic envoys

65
Privileges and Immunities
  • Representatives (addressed in headquarters
    agreements)
  • Officials of the international organization
  • Experts performing missions for the international
    organization

66
Privileges and Immunities
  • May sometimes be waived if it would serve the
    interest of justice

67
11. Dissolution
68
Dissolution
  • Once you create an international organization,
    how do you get rid of it?

69
Dissolution
  • Dissolution may be covered in the constituent
    instrument
  • E.g., World Bank may be dissolved by a vote of
    the majority of governors
  • European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
    may be dissolved by two-thirds of the members and
    three-fourths of the voting power
  • International Monetary Fund may be dissolved by a
    simple majority

70
Dissolution
  • If dissolution is not covered in the constituent
    instrument, then the organization might be
    dissolved by a decision of its highest
    representative body.
  • Example The League of Nations was dissolved by
    a decision taken by the Assembly without the need
    for individual assent by each member nation.

71
Dissolution
  • Open questions
  • Is unanimity required to dissolve an
    organization?
  • What happens to the assets?
  • What pays the debts?
  • Who keeps the archives?

72
12. Succession
73
Succession
  • Succession of International Organizations
  • Succession of Member States

74
Succession
  • Functions, rights, and obligations of one
    international organization are transferred to
    another
  • Could happen by
  • Straightforward replacement
  • Absorption
  • Merger
  • Transfer of functions from one organization to
    another
  • Could be
  • Express
  • Implied

75
Succession
  • In general, the assets (and archives) of the
    predecessor organization will go to the successor
    organization.
  • Whether the debts also transfer is unsettled.
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