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The role of the International Court of Justice in the development of human rights protection

ICJ is not a specialized human rights institution. The only contentious cases the ICJ can hear are cases between States. Individuals have no right of direct access. The ICJ also issues advisory opinions on legal questions if asked by the General Assembly or Security Council or by another U.N. organ or specialized agency authorized by the General Assembly. The Court has made some important contributions to human rights processes through advisory opinions

The only contentious cases the ICJ can hear are cases between States.

Individuals have no right of direct access. This is an important difference between the ICJ and other human rights institutions that allow some type of direct access.

The ICJ also issues advisory opinions on legal questions if asked by the General Assembly or Security Council or by another U.N. organ or specialized agency authorized by the General Assembly. The Court has made some important contributions to human rights processes through advisory opinions

There have been a few ICJ (and PCIJ) decisions significantly contributing to human rights law, but historically they have been a small part of the docket. To give an unscientific illustration, if you look at the indexes of the five recent volumes of the I.C.J. Reports covering 1994-1997 sitting in my bookcase, you’ll see very few references to “human rights.” Those you do see are concentrated in dissenting or separate opinions of a few judges. Thus, human rights issues have been an intermittent and not especially important part of the Court’s work.

In recent years, there have been a few more such cases, helping to stimulate this symposium. The Court’s responses have varied. When faced with competing legal values, today’s Court does not necessarily give human rights claims special weight or authority. It takes such claims quite seriously, but I do not see it as taking a uniformly “pro-human rights” approach.

In some cases, human rights values obviously have been given great weight. In the two consular notification cases by Paraguay and Germany against the United States, it clearly was of central importance to the Court that the cases ultimately involved convicted persons facing capital punishment. I think this significantly shaped both the procedures and the final result, although the Court’s task was made simpler by the fact that the United States admitted the core violation of the Convention.

The International Court of Justice has addressed the issue of jus cogens or related concepts, such as obligations erga omnes, in various contexts closely linked to humanitarian law, e.g. fundamental human rights,41 the prohibition of the threat or use of force,42 and the peoples’ right to selfdetermination. The Court’s first reference to the notion of obligation erga omnes was made with regard to the outlawing of genocide. In its Advisory Opinion on Reservations to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 28 May 1951, the Court highlights the particular nature of this Convention so as to recognize implicitly that the outlawing of genocide represents an obligation erga omnes.



The Court has not always received human rights claims supportively. In the 1996 advisory proceeding on the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons, it was vigorously argued that the use of nuclear weapons would unlawfully violate the right not to be arbitrarily deprived of life under Article 6 of the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The Court did not buy it. It agreed that Article 6 of the Covenant applied in wartime, but

found that what is arbitrary must be determined through the applicable lex specialis— the law of armed conflict.

Indeed, even in the LaGrand case, the Court seemed a bit reluctant to extend the sphere of human rights. Jurisdiction over one of Germany’s claims required a finding that the Convention conferred individual rights on the LaGrand brothers as a matter of international law. This led to a lively debate whether the right to consular notification was a human right. The Court declined to decide this question. It found that the Convention by its terms conferred individual rights on the brothers, and it simply did not need to decide whether these could be viewed as human rights


Date: 2015-12-18; view: 760


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The Inter-American Commission and Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Practice and procedure | The access of individuals to international justice
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