Informal human rights law-making: How treaty bodies use ‘General Comments’ to develop international law

IF 0.8 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
M. Lesch, Nina Reiners
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The United Nations treaty bodies were established to monitor the implementation of human rights by states parties. Through ‘General Comments’ – legally non-binding clarifications of treaty obligations – they have also influenced the development of international human rights law – for example, on the right to life and climate impacts. We address this phenomenon by establishing a twofold argument. First, we argue that General Comments are used by the committees to informally shape international law. They deliberately act as human rights law-makers, knowing that international institutions, organizations and professionals in their network will subsequently refer to such instruments. Second, we argue that treaty bodies not only rely on their network once they have adopted their outcome, but the experts’ personal networks also shape the drafting process of General Comments. We develop and illustrate an analytical framework with two case studies of General Comments on the human right to water and the torture prohibition. The analysis demonstrates the need for external knowledge of both technical and legal aspects of the norms being interpreted. By addressing pressing human rights challenges, expert committees can shape the law in times of stagnation and resist contestation even from powerful states.
非正式人权立法:条约机构如何利用“一般性意见”发展国际法
设立联合国条约机构是为了监测缔约国落实人权的情况。通过“一般性意见”——对条约义务进行法律上不具约束力的澄清——它们也影响了国际人权法的发展,例如关于生命权和气候影响的法律。我们通过建立一个双重论证来解决这一现象。首先,我们认为,委员会利用一般性意见非正式地塑造国际法。他们知道其网络中的国际机构、组织和专业人员随后将引用这些文书,因而故意充当人权立法者的角色。其次,我们认为,条约机构不仅在通过其成果后依赖其网络,而且专家的个人网络也影响了一般性意见的起草过程。我们通过关于享有水的人权和禁止酷刑的一般性意见的两个案例研究,制定并说明了一个分析框架。分析表明需要对所解释的规范的技术和法律方面的外部知识。通过解决紧迫的人权挑战,专家委员会可以在停滞时期塑造法律,甚至可以抵制来自强国的争论。
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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来源期刊
Global Constitutionalism
Global Constitutionalism Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
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