失乐园:主权国家利益、全球资源开发与人权政治

D. Augenstein
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引用次数: 8

摘要

本文以美国最高法院在Kiobel一案中限制《外国人侵权索赔法》域外适用范围的判决为线索,探讨主权如何在国际秩序中构建全球资源开发与人权本土化之间的关系。这一论点将国际人权法置于国家政治自决与全球经济开发自然资源之间的紧张关系中。在资源丰富的发展中国家开展的全球商业活动削弱了主权在政治自决方面的保护作用,而政治自决曾经是将人权限制在领土国家法律秩序之内的理由。与此同时,作为主权表达的管辖权限制了“跨国”公司在西方母国遭受域外人权侵犯的受害者诉诸司法的机会。我认为,这种不对称应该通过国际人权法的领土扩展来解决,这种法律解释了全球资源开采对人权的影响。这就需要根据各国的人权义务来评估针对企业侵犯人权的跨国侵权诉讼,以确保对其境外受害者进行有效的民事补救。此外,这表明受害者通过私人诉讼寻求正义不仅仅是为了满足经济损失,而且还代表了在西方国家的司法论坛中恢复其人权的公共和政治尝试。
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Paradise Lost: Sovereign State Interest, Global Resource Exploitation and the Politics of Human Rights
Taking its cue from the US Supreme Court judgment in Kiobel that restricted the extraterritorial reach of the Alien Tort Claims Act, this article explores how sovereignty structures the relationship between global resource exploitation and the localization of human rights in the international order of states. The argument situates international human rights law in an area of tension between national political self-determination and the global economic exploitation of natural resources. Global business operations in resource-rich developing countries undermine the protective role of sovereignty in relation to political self-determination that once justified the confinement of human rights to the territorial state legal order. At the same time, jurisdiction as an expression of sovereignty restricts access to justice for victims of extraterritorial human rights violations in Western home states of ‘multi-national’ corporations. I contend that this asymmetry should be resolved through a territorial extension of international human rights law that accounts for the human rights impacts of global resource exploitation. This entails that transnational tort litigation for corporate human rights violations should be appraised in the light of states’ human rights obligations to ensure effective civil remedies for victims located outside their borders. Moreover, it suggests that victims’ quest for justice through private litigation is not merely about the satisfaction of pecuniary damages but also represents a public and political attempt to reclaim their human rights in the judicial fora of Western states.
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