inter state relations Flashcards
Responsibility – general
- legal subject = holder of rights and obligations
- violation of obligations responsibility
= must bear responsibility for violations
= legal consequences
– “sanctions” (punishment)
– duty to make reparation
– other duties (e.g. public services, obligation to abstain
from certain actions) - responsibility = central concept of every legal order
- test of efficiency of the legal system
– enforcement
– effect
– requires centralised organ of enforcement
– only very basic approaches in international law
Differentiation in international law
Responsibility:
Bearing consequences for
damages resulting from
unlawful actions
Liability:
Bearing consequences for
damages resulting from
lawful actions
- different forms of responsibility depend on the legal subject:
– state responsibility
– responsibility of IOs
– individual criminal responsibility - liability:
– civil consequences
– absolute liability (Liability Convention, in space law)
– particularly dangerous activities
– liable party: - individual
- state
State responsibility – concept
- violation of international law obligations
- intergovernmental responsibility
- relationship between the injuring and the injured state
- nature of state responsibility:
– not criminal, rather civil
– purely compensatory (compensation for damages)
– particularly indemnity
– civilian – bilateral
– enforcement primarily through the injured state
– few aspects of public law
– no differentiation between contractual – tortious
– regardless of the nature of the violated norm - contractual obligation
- obligation under customary international law
Sources of state responsibility
- International customary law,
- developed over decades from general principles in
international jurisprudence - codification by the International Law Commission of the UN:
– Articles on the Responsibility of States for Internationally
Wrongful Acts (2001)
– not formally a treaty, rather annexed to a GA-Resolution
– text not binding
– but: extensive codification (specification in writing) of existing
international custom
– “authoritative” rules, which in practice are often applied as
binding
State responsibility – structure
- 3 main parts
– emergence of responsibility: When/how does it occur?
(attribution, potentially preclusion of wrongfulness)
– content of the responsibility: What are the consequences
for the injuring state? (compensation)
– enforcement: How may responsibility be implemented and
enforced? - prerequisites for the commencement of state
responsibility
– existence of a breach of an international obligation - act or omission
- which is not compatable with its international law
obligations
– and injury may be attributed to a state
– there are no circumstances precluding wrongfulness
– fault + damage, not generally required
Attribution
- act is attributable to a state
- state is only responsible for its own actions
- attribution of actions of a state’s own organs
– regardless of branch of government (which “authority”) - legislature
- judiciary
- executive
– regardless of position within a state’s organisational structure
– state organ = organ in a - structural sense: “formal” state organ
- functional sense: person/institution, empowered to excerise
sovereign tasks and does so in a specific case - delegation of sovereign function attribution of the
outsourced institution - e.g.: the State authorizes a private company to run a prison
Preclusion of wrongfulness
- injury and attribution, but justified
- reasons
– consent - voluntary, without coercion
- the injured norm permits it (comp. prohibition of the use of force)
– self-defence - Art 51 UN Charter
- individual – collective
– countermeasures (see slide 11)
– force majeure - wrongfulness results from irresistible force,
- materially impossible to perform the obligation
- e.g. fighter jet enters the airspace of another country due to
atmospheric disturbances
– necessity (Gabčíkovo-Nagymaros case/Hungary-Slovakia) - only way for the state to safeguard an essential interest
- against a grave and imminent peril
State responsibility – consequences
Immediate consequences of injury reparation
* Immediate consequences of injury
– cessation, if ongoing
– non-repetition, in case repetition is to be feared
* (full) reparation
– re-establish the situation which existed before the wrongful act
was committed (restitutio in integrum)
– compensation, if restitutio not possible
* objective value according to the market value (for material
damages)
* damnum emergens/direct damage + loss of profits/lucrum cessans
* interest rate
– satisfaction
* for immaterial damages (e.g. mere violation of territorial integrity)
* forms, e.g.:
– formal apology
– admission of wrongfulness
State responsibility – invocation
- Wo may invoke responsibility for a breach of international law?
- the (directly) injured state, e.g.
– bilateral treaty
– violation of territorial integrity - for obligations, which protect collective interests (erga omnes
obligations)
– every other state, to which the obligation is owed
– e.g. human rights (ECHR – state complaints) - enforcement
– decentralised unilateral countermeasures - violation of the injuring state’s rights by the injured state
- proportional to the original injury
- not affect fundamental human rights, ius cogens, diplomatic
immunities and privileges, norms of dispute settlement - no violation of the rights of third parties
- notification + termination, as soon as violation ends
– if competent: adjudicatory proceedings/dispute settlement
Responsibility of IOs
- IOs are subjects of international law
- responsibility for internationally wrongful acts
- problem: who is responsible?
– IO themselves or
– member states? - e.g. mandate of the UN-Security Council for peacekeeping
troops in Kosovo - troops of the contributing state commit human rights
violations - who is responsible? UN oder contributing state?
- important e.g. for individual complaints in the European
human rights system - European Court of Human Rights:
- the effective control (command and control) over the
relevant troops is decisive
International Criminal Responsibility
- certain serious crimes are prohibited under international law
- if committed criminal responsibility +
- criminal prosecution before international courts
- crimes:
– genocide
– crimes against humanity
– war crimes
– aggression - development: – military tribunals of Nuremberg and Tokio
– against the main war criminals of the axis powers of WWII - international criminal courts and tribunals
– ad hoc-tribunals, which were established on a temporary basis - e.g. International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 1993-2017
- e.g. International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda 1994-2018
– International Criminal Court (permanent criminal court) - conference in Rome 1998
- in force since 2002
– hybrid courts, e.g. for Sierra Leone, Lebanon
International Crimes
- genocide:
– certain acts (e.g. killing, torture)
– with intent to
– destroy
– a national, ethnical, racial or religious group - crimes against humanity
– certain acts (e.g. murder, enslavement, torture, deportation)
– as part of a widespread or systematic attack
– against the civilian population
– pursuant to a State or organizational policy - both genocide and crimes against humanity may be commited
during peace! - war crimes
– grave breaches of international humanitarian law, e.g. - wilful killing of civilians
- killing or torture of prisoners of war
- attacks on civilians and civilian buildings
- use of certain particularly cruel weapons (e.g. chemical
weapons) - pillaging towns
- command responsibility:
– immediate superiors (e.g. commanding officer) are responsible
for crimes of their subordinates
– possible in both a military and civil context! - following orders of a superior does not exempt from criminal
responsibility
International Criminal Court
basis: Rome Statute 1998, in force since 2002, seat in Den
Haag
* jurisdiction over crimes committed
– on the territory of a state party to the statute (territoriality) or
– by a national of a state party (nationality, personality)
* or referral of a situation directly by the Security Council
* complimentarity jurisdiction
– ICC may only act if the state with jurisdiction
* cannot or
* is not willing to (e.g. to protect its own citizens)
* conduct criminal proceedings
* member states have a duty to cooperate
* execution of decisions in the member states
Liability in international law
- liability = bearing responsibility for (material) damage,
which result from otherwise lawful acts under
international law
– particularly risky/dangerous activities with high damage
potential (e.g. operation of nuclear power plants)
– particularly dangerous goods (e.g. transport of highly
toxic waste)
– but no violation of international law! - effect: with the occurance of the damage the private
operator is obligated to pay financial compensation (civil
claim) - compensation of the damage caused through a monetary
payment - only on the basis of treaty law
- not customary international law!
- provisions in practice: – liability insurance is a prerequisite to carrying out the
activities
– obligation to establish and endow a national cover
fund
– Payments are made from a special fund under private
law, into which all operators muss contribute
– State is a guarantor for the damage (true liability
under international law) – comp. Art II Liability
Convention (international space law):
“A launching State shall be absolutely liable to pay
compensation for damage caused by its space
object on the surface of the earth or to aircraft in
flight.”