State Sovereignty, Popular Sovereignty and Individual Sovereignty: From Constitutional Nationalism to Multilevel Constitutionalism in International Economic Law?

E. Petersmann
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

This paper discusses the basic constitutional problem of modern international law since the UN Charter: How can the power-oriented international legal system based on sovereign equality of states be reconciled with the universal recognition of inalienable human rights deriving from respect for human dignity and popular sovereignty? State representatives, intergovernmental organizations, international judges and non-governmental organizations often express different views on how far the universal recognition of human rights has changed the subjects, structures, general principles, interpretative methods and object and purpose of international law (e.g. by the emergence of erga omnes obligations and jus cogens limiting state sovereignty to renounce human rights treaties, to refuse diplomatic protection of individuals abroad, or domestic implementation of international obligations for the benefit of domestic citizens). The paper explains why effective protection of human rights at home and abroad requires multilevel constitutional protection of individual rights as well as multilevel constitutional restraints of national, regional and worldwide governance powers and procedures. While all European states have accepted that the European Convention on Human Rights and EC law have evolved into international constitutional law, the prevailing paradigm for most states outside Europe remains constitutional nationalism rather than multilevel constitutional pluralism. Consequently, European proposals for reforms of international economic law often aim at constitutional reforms (e.g. of worldwide governance institutions) rather than only administrative reforms, as they are frequently favoured by non-European governments defending state sovereignty and popular sovereignty within a more power-oriented international law among states.
国家主权、人民主权与个人主权:从宪政民族主义到国际经济法的多层次宪政主义?
本文讨论了自《联合国宪章》以来现代国际法的基本宪法问题:以国家主权平等为基础的权力导向的国际法体系如何与尊重人的尊严和人民主权而产生的对不可剥夺人权的普遍承认相协调?各国代表、政府间组织、国际法官和非政府组织往往对普遍承认人权在多大程度上改变了国际法的主题、结构、一般原则、解释方法以及目标和宗旨(例如出现了普遍义务和限制国家主权放弃人权条约的强制法)表示不同的看法;拒绝在国外为个人提供外交保护,或拒绝为本国公民的利益在国内履行国际义务)。本文解释了为什么要在国内外有效地保障人权,既需要对个人权利进行多层次的宪法保护,也需要对国家、地区和世界范围内的治理权力和程序进行多层次的宪法约束。虽然所有欧洲国家都承认《欧洲人权公约》和欧共体法已演变为国际宪法,但大多数欧洲以外国家的主流范式仍然是宪法民族主义,而不是多层次的宪法多元主义。因此,欧洲对国际经济法改革的建议往往旨在宪法改革(例如全球治理机构),而不仅仅是行政改革,因为它们经常受到非欧洲政府的青睐,这些政府在国家间更以权力为导向的国际法中捍卫国家主权和人民主权。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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