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Mostrando postagens com marcador Immunity. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Immunity. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 19 de abril de 2017

International Law in the Post-Human Rights Era

96 Texas L. Rev. (2017 Forthcoming)

69 Pages Posted: 7 Apr 2017 


Vanderbilt University - Law School

Date Written: April 6, 2017

Abstract

International law is in a period of transition. After World War II, but especially since the 1980s, human rights expanded to almost every corner of international law. In doing so, they changed core features of international law itself, including the definition of sovereignty and the sources of international legal rules. But what might be termed the “golden-age” of international human rights law is over, at least for now. Whether measured in terms of the increasing number of authoritarian governments, the decline in international human rights enforcement architecture such as the Responsibility to Protect and the Alien Tort Statute, the growing power of China and Russia over the content of international law, or rising nationalism and populism, international human rights law is in retreat. 

The decline offers an opportunity to consider how human rights changed, or purported to change, international law and how international law as a whole can be made more effective in a post-human rights era. This article is the first to argue that international human rights law – whatever its much disputed benefits for human rights themselves – appears to have expanded and changed international law itself in ways that have made it weaker, less likely to generate compliance, and more likely to produce interstate friction and conflict. The debate around international law and human rights needs to be reframed to consider these costs and to evaluate whether international law, including the work of the United Nations, should focus on a stronger, more limited core of international legal norms that protects international peace and security, not human rights.

WUERTH, Ingrid B. International Law in the Post-Human Rights Era (April 6, 2017). 96 Texas L. Rev. (2017 Forthcoming). Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2947771>. Acesso em: 10 abr. 2017.

quarta-feira, 12 de abril de 2017

Immunity from Civil Jurisdiction: Where Do We Go from Here? Assessing the Relevance of Recent Opposing Trends in the Conceptualisation of State Immunity



University of Genoa, Dep. Political Science

Date Written: January 31, 2017
33 Pages
Posted: 6 Feb 2017 


Abstract
Traditional rules concerning the immunity of States from jurisdiction are currently challenged by Italian domestic courts, seeking the possibility to provide exceptions to foreign immunity based upon the gravity of the foreign State’s conduct and the consequences on human rights following recognition of State immunity. Such a trend is opposed to others that – for example – recognize a blanket of immunity to international organisations even where these do not establish internal procedures to adjudicate their conducts. The aim of the present work is to reconstruct the opposing emerging trends so to reflect on their value in the promotion of new rules, and to determine their consequences in terms of “crisis of the law of State immunity”.

DOMINELLI, Stefano. Immunity from Civil Jurisdiction: Where Do We Go from Here? Assessing the Relevance of Recent Opposing Trends in the Conceptualisation of State Immunity (January 31, 2017). European Society of International Law (ESIL) 2016 Annual Conference (Riga). Disponível em: <https://ssrn.com/abstract=2911994>. Acesso em: 04 abr. 2017.