{"title":"Shared Responsibility in International Law: A Conceptual Framework","authors":"A. Nollkaemper, Dov Jacobs","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.1916575","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper explores the phenomenon of the sharing of international responsibilities among multiple actors who contribute to injury to third parties. It examines the manifestations of shared responsibility, identifies the normative questions that it raises, assesses its possible consequences for international law and legal doctrine and sets forth a conceptual framework that allows us to analyze questions of shared responsibility. By doing so, the paper lays out the foundations, scope and ambitions of the SHARES Project - a five-year research project funded by the European Research Council and carried out by a research group at the Amsterdam Center for International Law.The paper more particularly explores the current framework of international state responsibility, how it can apply to situations of shared responsibility and what are its limits. It then suggests revisiting the foundations of international responsibility and proposes, in light of its public/private nature and objectives to move away from a unitary to differentiated regimes of international responsibility. It is within this new framework that some key normative questions, both substantial and procedural, that arise in situations of shared responsibility are discussed (joint and several liability, relationship between multiple wrongdoers, changes to the bilateral nature of international dispute settlement). The paper concludes with a 'semantic toolbox' of shared responsibility, defining concepts such as 'shared accountability', 'shared attribution or 'shared liability' which will provide a useful point of reference for subsequent research on the topic.","PeriodicalId":331401,"journal":{"name":"Michigan Journal of International Law","volume":"10 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-08-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"111","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Michigan Journal of International Law","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/SSRN.1916575","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 111
Abstract
This paper explores the phenomenon of the sharing of international responsibilities among multiple actors who contribute to injury to third parties. It examines the manifestations of shared responsibility, identifies the normative questions that it raises, assesses its possible consequences for international law and legal doctrine and sets forth a conceptual framework that allows us to analyze questions of shared responsibility. By doing so, the paper lays out the foundations, scope and ambitions of the SHARES Project - a five-year research project funded by the European Research Council and carried out by a research group at the Amsterdam Center for International Law.The paper more particularly explores the current framework of international state responsibility, how it can apply to situations of shared responsibility and what are its limits. It then suggests revisiting the foundations of international responsibility and proposes, in light of its public/private nature and objectives to move away from a unitary to differentiated regimes of international responsibility. It is within this new framework that some key normative questions, both substantial and procedural, that arise in situations of shared responsibility are discussed (joint and several liability, relationship between multiple wrongdoers, changes to the bilateral nature of international dispute settlement). The paper concludes with a 'semantic toolbox' of shared responsibility, defining concepts such as 'shared accountability', 'shared attribution or 'shared liability' which will provide a useful point of reference for subsequent research on the topic.
本文探讨了造成第三方伤害的多个行为者之间分担国际责任的现象。它审查了共同责任的表现形式,确定了它所引起的规范性问题,评估了它对国际法和法律理论可能产生的后果,并提出了一个概念框架,使我们能够分析共同责任的问题。通过这样做,论文阐述了SHARES项目的基础、范围和目标。SHARES项目是一个为期五年的研究项目,由欧洲研究理事会(European research Council)资助,由阿姆斯特丹国际法中心(Amsterdam Center for International Law)的一个研究小组实施。本文更具体地探讨了当前的国际国家责任框架,它如何适用于共同责任的情况以及它的局限性。然后,它建议重新审视国际责任的基础,并根据其公共/私人性质和目标,建议从单一的国际责任制度转向有区别的国际责任制度。正是在这个新的框架内,讨论了在分担责任的情况下产生的一些实质性和程序性的关键规范问题(共同和若干责任、多个违法者之间的关系、改变国际争端解决的双边性质)。本文最后给出了一个共同责任的“语义工具箱”,定义了诸如“共同责任”、“共同归因”或“共同责任”等概念,这将为后续的研究提供有用的参考点。