国际司法化的高水位线?

K. Alter
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摘要

国际法院和法庭的激增是冷战后的一个现象。它的时机与新自由主义的华盛顿共识的兴起,以及促进人权和民主减少暴力和国家间战争的想法不谋而合。我们是否应该期待民众对全球化和民主的支持率下降,以及民族主义领导人和反对人权和法治的强国的崛起,标志着国际裁决时代的结束?这篇文章将考虑推动国际法院和国际审判扩散的力量,以及更普遍的国际司法化,以及有助于国际政治非司法化的因素,以探索当前时刻对国际审判的未来意味着什么。我认为正式的非司法化——取消国际裁决——比事实上的非司法化可能性更小。进一步探讨事实上的非司法化,我认为有两种可能。1)国际裁决可以回到睡美人模式,即审判机构存在,但它们要么很少被使用,要么它们的裁决在法律和政治上变得不那么相关。2)我们可以看到,审判机构要么变得顺从,要么产生争议,从而破坏其合法性和权威。我们不知道这两种选择是短期平衡还是长期平衡,但总的来说,我预测司法化的国际政治将持续下去。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The High Water Mark of International Judicialization?
The proliferation of international courts and tribunals was a post-Cold War phenomenon. Its timing coincided with rise of the Neo-liberal Washington Consensus, and with the idea that promoting human rights and democracy decreases violence and interstate-war. Should we expect declining popular support for globalization and democracy, and the rise of nationalists leaders and powerful countries antagonistic to human rights and the rule of law to signal the end of the international adjudication era? This contribution will consider the forces that propelled the proliferation of international courts and international adjudication, and international judicialization more generally alongside the factors that contribute to dejudicializing international politics to explore what the current moment suggests for the future of international adjudication. I argue that formal dejudicialization–the elimination of international adjudication–is less likely than de facto dejudicialization. Exploring further de facto dejudicialization, I consider two likely possibilities. 1) International adjudication can return to Sleeping Beauty mode where adjudicatory bodies exist but they are either little used and/or their rulings become less legally and politically relevant. 2) We can witness decay where adjudicatory bodies either become subservient or they generate contestation that undermines their legitimacy and authority. We cannot know if these two options present short or longer term equilibriums, but overall I predict that judicialized international politics will persist.
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