State International Agreements: The United States, Canada, and Constitutional Evolution

Curtis A. Bradley
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Abstract

Abstract The text of the US Constitution appears to require that individual states, to the extent that they are ever allowed to conclude agreements with foreign governments, must obtain congressional approval. In practice, however, states conclude many agreements with foreign governments, including with Canada and its provinces, and they almost never seek congressional approval. This practice is an illustration of both the importance of federalism in US foreign relations and the significant role played by historical practice in informing US constitutional interpretation. The phenomenon of state international agreements assumed new prominence in 2019 when the Trump administration sued to challenge a climate change agreement that the state of California had made with Québec. Despite this challenge, for the most part, neither Congress nor the executive branch has resisted the growth in state international agreements. This acquiescence could change as countries like China target US states in an effort to work around strained relations with the US national government and as states become more assertive in resisting the national government’s foreign policies. In any event, the practice of state international agreements unapproved by Congress rests in part on a distinction between binding and non-binding agreements that deserves greater scrutiny under both domestic and international law.
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国家国际协定:美国、加拿大和宪法演变
美国宪法的文本似乎要求个别州,如果它们被允许与外国政府缔结协议,必须获得国会的批准。然而,在实践中,各州与外国政府签订了许多协议,包括与加拿大及其各省签订的协议,它们几乎从不寻求国会的批准。这一实践既说明了联邦制在美国外交关系中的重要性,也说明了历史实践在美国宪法解释中所起的重要作用。2019年,特朗普政府提起诉讼,对加利福尼亚州与quacimac达成的一项气候变化协议提出质疑,州际协议的现象变得更加突出。尽管面临这样的挑战,但在很大程度上,国会和行政部门都没有抵制州际协议的增长。随着中国等国家以美国各州为目标,努力解决与美国政府的紧张关系,以及各州在抵制美国政府的外交政策方面变得更加自信,这种默许可能会发生变化。无论如何,未经国会批准的州级国际协议的做法,在一定程度上取决于约束性协议和非约束性协议之间的区别,后者在国内法和国际法下都值得更严格的审查。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
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