修补网络:普遍管辖权、人道主义干预和安全理事会废除豁免

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
J. Marks
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引用次数: 7

摘要

国家刑事法院偶尔但越来越多地行使普遍管辖权,不可避免地在严重国际罪行的个人刑事责任与主权豁免要求之间造成紧张关系。在刚果民主共和国诉比利时案中,国际法院本来有机会解决这种紧张关系。然而,法院对在职外交部长豁免的表述为滥用职权创造了可能性,即部长们依靠其官方地位犯下严重的国际罪行并使自己免受起诉。本文重新审查普遍管辖权的理由和反对意见,并认为,在公职人员犯下严重国际罪行的情况下,支持豁免的理由是站不住脚的。在这种情况下,普遍刑事管辖权作为一种侵入性较低的人道主义干预形式的论点可能是令人信服的。该条认为,安全理事会应在这种情况下撤销豁免,虽然这是新颖的做法,但有法律权威和历史先例支持这种行动。尽管安理会在原则基础上撤销豁免将是一项挑战,但至少在不涉及安理会常任理事国官员豁免的情况下,这一挑战不应是不可克服的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mending the Web: Universal Jurisdiction, Humanitarian Intervention and the Abrogation of Immunity by the Security Council
The sporadic but increasing exercise of universal jurisdiction by national criminal courts has inevitably created a tension between individual criminal responsibility for serious international crimes and claims of sovereign immunity. In Democratic Republic of Congo v Belgium, the International Court of Justice had the opportunity of resolving that tension. However, the Court's articulation of immunity for serving foreign ministers creates possibilities for abuse where ministers rely on their official positions to perpetrate serious international crimes and to insulate themselves from prosecution. This article reexamines the rationales for and objections to universal jurisdiction, and argues that where public officials perpetrate serious international crimes, the arguments for upholding immunity are weak. In such cases, the arguments for universal criminal jurisdiction as a less invasive form of humanitarian intervention may be compelling. The article contends that the Security Council should withdraw immunity in such cases and that although this would be novel, there is both legal authority and historical precedent to support such action. Although it will be a challenge for the Council to withdraw immunity on a principled basis, this challenge should not be insurmountable at least where the immunity of an official of a permanent member of the Council is not involved.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Over forty years] ago, under the guidance of the late Professor Wolfgang Friedmann, a group of Columbia law students belonging to the Columbia Society of International Law founded the Bulletin of the Columbia Society of International Law. The Bulletin’s first volume, containing two issues, was a forum for the informal discussion of international legal questions; the second volume, published in 1963 under the title International Law Bulletin, aspired more to the tradition of the scholarly law review. Today’s Columbia Journal of Transnational Law is heir to those early efforts.
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