Normative inconsistencies in the state system with speciaL emphasis on internationaL law
Normative inconsistencies in the state system with speciaL emphasis on internationaL law
Author(s): Hans Köchler
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, International Law, Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
Published by: Институт за међународну политику и привреду
Keywords: international law; international humanitarian law; international criminal law; self-determination; United Nations Charter; Kosovo case
Summary/Abstract: In order to be perceived as legitimate by those subject to it, a system of legal norms should be free of contradictions. The very idea of justice is incompatible with an erratic interpretation and, subsequently, arbitrary application of norms. Systemic contradictions make actions by state authorities unpredictable. However, at the domestic as well as at the international level, considerations of power and interest have often made of the respective body of norms a “hermeneutical minefield.” The international legal order, in particular, contains contradictions even between the most basic principles such as state sovereignty, self-determination and the rules of international humanitarian law. While at the national level the authority of constitutional courts may help to eliminate contradictions and inconsistencies, there exists, apart from limited regional arrangements, no such separation of powers at the international level. The paper analyzes, inter alia, the systemic, destabilizing impact of normative contradictions in exemplary cases related to the interpretation of the United Nations Charter and the system of international humanitarian and international criminal law.
Book: KOSOVO : sui generis or precedent in international relations
- Page Range: 108-136
- Page Count: 29
- Publication Year: 2018
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF