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UN CHARTER

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Title: UN CHARTER


1
  • UN CHARTER STRUCTURAL ASPECTS

Prof David K. Linnan USC LAW 783 Unit Nine
2
BACKGROUND I
  • POLITICAL VS LEGAL BACKGROUND
  • 1. Atlantic Charter August 1941 pre-US entry
    into WW II US-UK discussions of future post-war
    order Allies views of why fighting, including
  • No US or UK territorial gains
  • Territorial adjustment conform to people
  • People have right to choose own government
  • Trade barriers lowered
  • Disarmament
  • Freedom from fear want
  • Freedom of the seas
  • New association of nations

3
BACKGROUND II
  • POLITICAL VS LEGAL BACKGROUND
  • 2. UNs chief responsibilities re UN Charter
    following Atlantic Charter are preserving peace
    securing economic development, but there are
    strategic differences between large and small vs
    developing and industrialized states even
    predating UN

4
BACKGROUND III
  • POLITICAL VS LEGAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
  • 3. Internationally domestically, basic
    differences about whether intl law system
    should work on traditional state to state basis
    vs some picture of intl society (although
    differences of opinion what that really means
    e.g., domestically unilateralists vs
    multilateralists)
  • 4. Many of the legal issues represent rather
    formalistic arguments in which the real
    substance is differing pictures as under 1 2
    above, so separate exercise what people argue
    from why people argue

5
POLITICS LAW I
  • POLITICAL VS LEGAL POSITIONS, GENERALLY SPEAKING
  • 1. Small states prefer collective legalization
    approaches because they lack individual
    leverage or resources for political approaches
    to intl problems
  • 2. Small, poor states prefer international
    organizations with a one state-one vote
    system (like UN General Assembly or GA) as
    opposed to weighted voting by financial
    contribution (as with intl financial
    institutions such as World Bank or IMF), plus
    you see efforts to move matters between the two
    such as UNCTAD (UN Conference on Trade
    Development) or UNDP (UN Development Programme)

6
POLITICS LAW II
  • POLITICAL VS LEGAL POSITIONS, GENERALLY SPEAKING
    (CONTD)
  • 3. Developing states have tradition reaching
    back to New Intl Economic Order (NIEO) of late
    1960s-early 1970s distributive justice claims
    plus anti-colonial (anti- imperialist) rhetoric
    of self-determination as political view of law
  • 4. Small and large state perspectives differ on
    whether the role of an intl organization like
    the UN is to be a coordinating body for
    meetings among states, or rather a
    supranational body to restrain economic
    broader power of predominant states

7
LEGAL INTERPRETATION I
  • LEGAL EXPRESSION OF POLITICAL ARGUMENTS
  • 1. Argumentation about the character of UN in
    constituent treaty quasi-constitutional terms
    as independent actor versus subordinate
    creature of states that created it, is a legal
    expression of the political arguments.
  • 2. Visible in practice too in terms of Kofi
    Annan as UN Sec Gen facing off against coalition
    in Iraq and saying going in without Security
    Council approval was illegal (regardless
    whether it is true in substantive terms, a very
    undiplomatic thing to put in the mouth of the
    head administrator of a subordinate creature of
    the states that created it).

8
LEGAL INTERPRETATION II
  • LEGAL EXPRESSION OF POLITICAL ARGUMENTS (CONTD)
  • 3. Beyond argumentation about UN Charter as
    organic constitution of independent entity, fit
    within field of intl organization law
    developing concept close to administrative law
    for all intl organizations (but UN its
    subsidiary organs still primary example).
  • 4. If you look at different approaches to intl
    law going back to first unit, note the
    underpinnings of differing views (intl law as
    law between trad sovereign states vs view of UN
    as supranational organization as part of intl
    society of co-equal but somewhat less
    independent state)

9
LEGAL INTERPRETATION III
  • LEGAL EXPRESSION OF POLITICAL ARGUMENTS (CONTD)
  • 5. Within the UN structure you still have
    expressly political bodies (General Assembly
    Security Council), plus ICJ as judicial organ so
    that now conflicts too on legal level concerning
    whether political activities like efforts to
    maintain peace via Security Council (on-going
    hostilities) may be interfered with by ICJ as in
    hearing proceedings on legality under intl law
    of use of armed force in on- going hostilities
    (analogous tensions to justice vs reconciliation
    in post-conflict situations)

10
UN PURPOSES
  • UN CHARTER PREAMBLE ART I
  • 1. Save future from scourge of war (twice in own
    lifetime), collective measures to preserve peace
  • 2. Affirming fundamental human rights equal
    rights men women, nations large small,
    self- determination
  • 3. Establish conditions of respect for intl
    law, cooperation on intl problems of economic,
    social, cultural or humanitarian nature
  • 4. Promote social progress better standards of
    life in larger freedom

11
UN PRINCIPLES ART 2
  • UN CHARTER ART 2
  • 2(1) Sovereign equality of member states
  • 2(2) Members to fulfill Charter obligations
  • 2(3) Peaceful settlement of intl disputes
  • 2(4) Members refrain in their international
    relations from the threat or use of
    forceagainst the territorial integrity or
    political independence of any state, or in any
    other manner inconsistent with the purposes of
    the United Nations.

12
UN PRINCIPLES ART 2
  • UN CHARTER ART II (CONTD)
  • 2(5) Members to give UN assistance in action
    taken in accordance with Charter, and refrain
    from assisting any state subject of UN
    preventive or enforcement action
  • 2(6) UN to ensure that non-,member states act in
    accordance with these principles as necessary
    for maintenance of intl peace security
  • 2(7) No authorization of UN to intervene in
    domestic jurisdiction of any state or to submit
    such matters to settlement under the present
    Charter but this principle shall not prejudice
    application of enforcement measures under
    Chapter VII

13
UN MEMBERSHIP I
  • HIDDEN MEMBERSHIP CRITERIA CH. II
  • 1. Membership originally excluded defeated WW
    II Axis Powers just defeated (Germany Japan)
  • 2. Decolonization outside South America largely
    took place in 1950s-1960s, so original UN
    membership was largely traditional civilized
    world states (meaning largely Europe North
    America), so Charter has lots of transitional
    management mechanisms for mandates territories
    largely dead by 1970s

14
UN MEMBERSHIP II
  • HIDDEN MEMBERSHIP CRITERIA CH. II (CONTD)
  • 3. Arts 4 5 provides for general membership
    criterion suspension of membership of states
    subject to enforcement actions, with Security
    Council acting together with GA (model of
    Security Council acting with something that
    looks like advice consent with SC as active
    partner)

15
UN ORGANS CH III
  • CHIEF UN ORGANS ART 7
  • 1. General Assembly
  • 2. Security Council
  • 3. Economic Social Council
  • 4. Trusteeship Council
  • 5. Intl Court of Justice
  • 6. Secretariat
  • PLUS SUCH SUBSIDIARY ORGANS AS MAY BE FOUND
    NECESSARY . . . ESTABLISHED UNDER CHARTER

16
UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY I
  • UN GA FUNCTIONS POWERS, CH IV
  • 1. General tendency is to give GA authority to
    discuss all matters, but to reserve powers to
    act on intl peace in particular to SC
  • 2. Specific reservation of Art 12 of authority
    in SC, Sec Gen to inform GA of developments with
    permission of SC

17
UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY II
  • UN GA FUNCTIONS POWERS (CONTD)
  • 3. GA voting on important questions by 2/3
    majority present voting
  • a. intl peace security
  • b. election non-permanent SC members
  • c. Trusteeship Council matters
  • d. admission, suspension expulsion of
    members
  • e. budgetary matters
  • 4. Tendency for intl peace matters to go
    through SC, all else through GA except counter
    pressure on one-state- one-vote (e.g.,
    Palestinians-Israeli conflict)
  • 5. No vote in GA if membership contribution in
    arrears

18
UN SECURITY COUNCIL I
  • UN SC CH V, VI VII
  • 1. SC composition currently 15 members, 5
    permanent rest non-permanent
  • 2. Permanent members are WW II Allies, US, UK,
    France, Russia China
  • 3. Re voting, permanent members have veto
    individually, require affirmative vote of 9
    members ( so permanent members can stop SC
    action, but still require some non- permanent
    members agmt to take measures)

19
UN SECURITY COUNCIL II
  • UN SC CH VI VII SUBSTANTIVE POWERS FOR INTL
    PEACE
  • 1. Ch VI peaceful settlement of disputes,
    likely to endanger the maintenance of intl
    peace security
  • 2. Ch VI, SC having mediating investigatory
    role, particularly if party negotiation fails,
    at party request can recommend settlement terms

20
UN SECURITY COUNCIL III
  • UN SC CH VI VII SUBSTANTIVE POWERS FOR INTL
    PEACE (CONTD)
  • 3. Ch VII as enforcement action core of SC
    powers in use of force setting
  • 4. Art 39 jurisdiction SC shall determine the
    existence of any threat to the peace, breach of
    the peace, or act of aggression nad shall make
    recommendations, or decide what measures shall
    be taken in accordance with articles 41 42, to
    maintain or restore intl peace security
  • a. Trad view of threat to peace is war between
    two countries
  • b. Newer view is ethnic civil too encompassed
    (e.g., spillover in former Yugoslavia), but
    what of Charter art 2(7))

21
UN SECURITY COUNCIL IV
  • UN SC CH VI VII SUBSTANTIVE POWERS FOR INTL
    PEACE (CONTD)
  • 5. Art 43 view of UN forces dead letter, Cold
    War killed it since then SC authorizes,
    members provide forces to carry out resolution
  • 6. Art 41 measures not involving the use of
    armed force vs Art 42 measures involving the use
    of armed force
  • WHENEVER YOU READ ABOUT SECURITY COUNCIL
    AUTHORIZING MEASURES, CH VII EITHER ART 41 OR
    42 WITH INTERLOCK ON STATES ENFORCING UNDER SC
    AUTHORITY, EXCLUSION OF GA IN REMAINING SEIZED

22
UN SECURITY COUNCIL V
  • UN SC CH VI VII SUBSTANTIVE POWERS FOR INTL
    PEACE (CONTD)
  • 7. Subsidiary rights as Art 44 right of non-SC
    members contributing troops to participate in
    decisions regarding its troops
  • 8. Consultation rights for member states with
    special economic problems by virtue of SC
    measures (e.g., Jordan as affected by Iraq
    embargoes) general mutual assistance in
    carrying out SC measures

23
UN SECURITY COUNCIL VI
  • UN SC CH VI VII SUBSTANTIVE POWERS FOR INTL
    PEACE (CONTD)
  • 9. Self-defense under art 51 where most use of
    force law developed once SC froze during Cold
    War
  • Art 51 Nothing in the present Charter shall
    impair the inherent right of individual or
    collective self-defense if an armed attack
    occurs against a Member of the UN, until the SC
    has taken measures necessary to maintain intl
    peace security. plus duty to report
    self-defense measures to SC, not affecting SC
    authority

24
REGIONAL ECOSOC
  • UN CH VIII-X
  • 1. Ch VIII is preservation clause on regional
    arrangements (OAS, etc.)
  • 2. Ch IX articulates essential human rights
    social conditions jurisdiction (full employment,
    etc.)
  • 3. Ch X sets ECOSOC mid-level framework for
    human rights, etc. at committee level internally
    with periodic exam reports

25
DECOLONIZATION
  • CH XI, XII XIII TRUSTEESHIP/MANDATES
  • 1. Structure established for decolonization,
    now 60 years later largely dead letter
  • 2. Self-determination now largely viewed as
    substantive rather than procedural or
    institutional problem

26
CH XIV INTL COURT
  • JUDICIAL ARM W/ HIDDEN QUES
  • 1. Ch XIV essentially incorporates old League
    PICJ at Hague aka World Court
  • 2. Hidden issues of conflicting judicial
    Political or executive roles not unlike US
    constitutional laws political question
    problems
  • 3. Provision for GA, SC or subsidiary UN organs
    to ask for advisory opinions (e.g., GA request
    on Israeli security fence, Israeli view
    opposing Palestinian view)
  • ULTIMATE ARGUMENT RE JUSTICIABILITY ON USE OF
    FORCE-TYPE QUESTIONS

27
UN CHARTER CH XVI
  • MISC
  • 1. Art 103 analogous to supremacy clause?
  • Art 103 In event of a conflict between the
    obligations of the members of the UN under the
    present Charter and their obligations under any
    other intl agmt, their obligations under the
    present charter shall prevail
  • 2. Art 104 on UN legal capacity later ICJ
    opinion on state responsibility protection of
    UN employees (privileges immunities)
  • 3. Art 108 on amendment of charter by 2/3
    majority vote including approval by all SC
    permanent members
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