International law, Sixth edition
Particularism versus Universalism’ in
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International Law MALCOLM N. SHAW
Ibid., p. xxi.
72 See also M. Eyskens, ‘Particularism versus Universalism’ in International Law – Theory and Practice (ed. K. Wellens), The Hague, 1998, p. 11. 73 Gentle Civilizer of Nations. i n t e r nat i o na l l aw t o day 65 international law is more than a set of rules, but it then proceeds to emphasise the indeterminacy as such of law rather than seeing law as a collection of competing norms between which choices must be made. 74 One particular area of study in recent years has been that concerned with the position of women within international law, both in terms of the structure of the system and the, for example, relative absence of females from the institutions and processes of international law and in terms of substantive law, which has until recently paid little attention to the needs and concerns of women. 75 The fragmentation of international law? 76 The tremendous expansion of both the rules and the institutions of inter- national law, with the rise of more and more specialist areas, such as trade law, environmental law and human rights law, has led to arguments that international law as a holistic system is in the process of fragmentation. This has led to the fear that the centre will not be able to hold and that in- ternational law might dissolve into a series of discrete localised or limited systems with little or no interrelationship. In many ways it is the explosion 74 See Higgins, Problems and Process, p. 9. See also J. A. Beckett, ‘Countering Uncertainty and Ending Up/Down Arguments: Prolegomena to a Response to NAIL’, 16 EJIL, 2005, p. 213. 75 See e.g. H. Charlesworth and C. M. Chinkin, The Boundaries of International Law: A Feminist Analysis, Manchester, 2000; H. Charlesworth, C. M. Chinkin and S. Wright, ‘Feminist Approaches to International Law’, 85 AJIL, 1991, p. 613; F. Tes ´on, ‘Feminism and International Law: A Reply’, 33 Va. JIL, 1993, p. 647, and International Law: Modern Feminist Approaches (eds. D. Buss and A. Manji), Oxford, 2005. See also the ‘Final Report on Women’s Equality and Nationality in International Law’ in Report of the Sixty-Ninth Conference, International Law Association, London, 2000, p. 248. Note that article 25(2) of the Rules of the European Court of Human Rights requires that the Sections of the Court be ‘gender balanced’, while article 36(8)a(iii) of the Statute of the International Criminal Court 1998 declares that the selection process for judges of the Court should include the need for a ‘fair representation of female and male judges’. See also ICC-ASP/1/Res.- 2 (2002) on the procedure for nomination of judges which required a minimum number of female and male candidates. 76 See e.g. ‘Fragmentation of International Law: Difficulties Arising from the Diversification and Expansion of International Law’, Report of the Study Group of the International Law Commission (finalised by M. Koskenniemi), A/CN.4/L.682, 2006; M. Koskenniemi and P. Leino, ‘Fragmentation of International Law? Postmodern Anxieties’, 15 Leiden Journal of International Law, 2002, p. 553; M. Prost and P. K. Clark, ‘Unity, Diversity and the Fragmentation of International Law’, 5 Chinese Journal of International Law, 2006, p. 341; B. Simma and D. Pulkowski, ‘Of Planets and the Universe: Self-contained Regimes in International Law’, 17 EJIL, 2006, p. 483, and E. Benvenisti and G. W. Downs, ‘The Empire’s New Clothes: Political Economy and the Fragmentation of International Law’, 60 Stanford Law Review, 2007, p. 595. 66 i n t e r nat i o na l l aw of what is termed globalisation, with the consequential spread of practices and mechanisms across the world, 77 that has precipitated this problem of fragmentation, being defined in one view as the ‘emergence of specialised and relatively autonomous spheres of social action and structure’. 78 This has led to a debate as to the relationship between self-contained regimes in international law and the system as a whole, 79 with the fear being ex- pressed that the rise of specialised rules and mechanisms that have no clear authority relationship might lead to conflicts between local systems and, at the least, inconsistency in the interpretation and development of international law. 80 While to some extent the former is a real danger, 81 there is still a powerful centralising dynamic in international law and indeed a strong presumption against normative conflict: 82 for example, the principle that special law (lex specialis) derogates from general law (lex generalis), so that the more detailed and specific rule will have prior- ity. 83 It is also true that international law, as a decentralised system, has long had to face the problem of relating together a variety of rules derived from general treaties, specific treaties and customary law, while it is in- deed the case that even with the increase in specialist areas of international law, there is an increasing tendency to relate hitherto discrete spheres. 84 Further, while decisions of international courts and tribunals may not al- ways be compatible, there is a hierarchy of authority with the International Court of Justice at the summit. 85 The International Law Commission’s Re- port on Fragmentation reached two principal conclusions, first that ‘the 77 See e.g. P. S. Berman, The Globalisation of International Law, Aldershot, 2005. 78 International Law Commission Report on Fragmentation, p. 11. 79 See, for an early example, B. Simma, ‘Self-Contained Regimes’, 16 Netherlands YIL, 1985, p. 111. 80 See e.g. Unity and Diversity in International Law (eds. A. Zimmermann and R. Hofmann), Berlin, 2006; K. Wellens, ‘Fragmentation of International Law and Establishment of an Accountability Regime for International Organizations’, 25 Michigan Journal of Interna- Download 7,77 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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