国际法中的民主目的论原则

Niels Petersen
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引用次数: 22

摘要

20世纪90年代初,柏林墙倒塌后,法律学者就国际法中是否存在民主治理权展开了辩论。民主权利学派的许多拥护者似乎认为,民主化只是政治地位的简单转变,是从一种政府形式转变为另一种政府形式。本文试图通过考察当前政治科学中关于民主化理论的讨论来分析这一基本假设。通过这一视角,它将重新考虑与可能存在的民主原则有关的国际实践和相应的法律文件。在这方面,将特别强调三个可能成为先例的领域——联合国大会的决议、美洲国家组织或非洲联盟等区域组织的做法,以及以民主为名的军事干预。分析将表明,与此同时,国际法的合法性原则比民主权利学派的主张更为温和和苛刻。民主不是严格的义务,而是一种目的论原则。一旦建立了选举机构,各国就有义务向民主发展,巩固和优化民主。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Principle of Democratic Teleology in International Law
In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Berlin wall, legal scholars initiated a debate on the existence of a right to democratic governance in international law. Many of the adherents to the democratic entitlement school seem to assume that democratization is a simple shift in the political status, a change from one form of government to another. This contribution seeks to analyze this underlying assumption by taking a look at the current discussion on democratization theory in the political sciences. Through this lens, it will reconsider the international practice and the corresponding legal documents related to the existence of a possible democracy principle. In this respect, a special emphasis will be put on three areas of potential precedents – resolutions of the UN General Assembly, the practice of regional organizations such as the Organization of American States or the African Union, and military interventions in the name of democracy. The analysis will show that the legitimacy principle of international law is, at the same time, more modest and more demanding than the claim of the democratic entitlement school. It will be argued that democracy is no strict obligation, but rather a teleological principle. States are obliged to develop towards democracy and to consolidate and to optimize democracy, once electoral institutions have been established.
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