20 research outputs found
The Effect of a Domestic Amnesty on the Ability of Foreign States to Prosecute Alleged Perpetrators of Serious Human Rights Violations
The Effect of a Domestic Amnesty on the Ability of Foreign States to Prosecute Alleged Perpetrators of Serious Human Rights Violations
Current Developments in the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
Current developments in the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda: Judgment of a Trial Chamber in the case of The Prosecutor v. Laurent Semanza
State of Necessity as a Justification for Internationally Wrongful Conduct
In this Article I examine the concept of necessity as an excuse or
justification for a State\u27s breach of an international legal obligation
from a practical and theoretical perspective. I will show that while the
concept of a state of necessity as understood by the International Law
Commission (ILC) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) may be
applicable in respect of non-fulfilment by States of human rights
obligations, the balancing test in the provisionally-adopted text of
article 33 of the ILC\u27s Draft Articles on State Responsibility6 is designed
to weigh inconsistent interests of two States rather than interests of a
State against interests of a community of States and is thus ill-suited
for the context of erga omnes and multilateral obligations that human
rights norms entail. As a consequence, necessity, as expressed in the
current text of article 33, could too easily allow a State to excuse its
non-compliance with international human rights obligations in
situations of threat to an essential interest of the State. That is to say,
by way of a practical example, that a State could close its borders to a
large-scale influx of asylum-seekers and excuse its non-compliance with
its international duty not to expose asylum-seekers to the risk of
persecution by asserting that the influx would threaten an essential
State interest, such as the preservation of internal order and security
The Effect of a Domestic Amnesty on the Ability of Foreign States to Prosecute Alleged Perpetrators of Serious Human Rights Violations
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