从似是而非到人类脆弱性或两者兼而有之:国际法院审理的人权案件中临时措施标准的转变

IF 0.3 Q3 LAW Liverpool Law Review Pub Date : 2024-01-11 DOI:10.1007/s10991-023-09358-2
Atul Alexander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

国际法院(ICJ)有权指示临时措施,以维护各国的权利。诉诸临时措施作为第一道防线的国家最近急剧增加。采取临时措施的要求之一是 "合理性",其起源是亚伯拉罕法官在纸浆厂案(2009 年)中提出的个别意见。最近,临时措施令已通过人权条约得到援引。然而,临时措施请求的激增也导致国际法院制定了不一致的合理性标准。此外,已故巴西法官坎卡多-特林达德(Cancado Trindade)赞同将 "人的脆弱性 "作为临时措施令的标准检验标准,而不是似是而非的标准。在本文中,作者全面分析了人权案件中的 "似是而非标准",并认为国际法院在解释似是而非标准时采用了不一致的方法。作者还建议在人权案件中平衡人的脆弱性和可信性,以表明临时措施。
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Plausibility to Human Vulnerability or Both: Shifting Provisional Measures Standards in Human Rights Cases Before the International Court of Justice

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has the power to indicate provisional measures to preserve the rights of the States. States resorting to provisional measures as a first line of defence has recently increased exponentially. One of the requirements for rendering provisional measure is ‘plausibility’, which got its inception courtesy the separate opinion of Judge Abraham in the Pulp Mills case (2009). Lately, provisional measures orders have been invoked through human rights treaties. However, the surge in requests for provisional measures has also resulted in the ICJ setting out inconsistent plausibility standards. Additionally, the late Brazilian Judge Cancado Trindade endorsed ‘human vulnerability’ as the standard test in provisional measures orders over plausibility. In this article, the author comprehensively analyses the ‘plausibility test’ in human rights cases and argues that the ICJ has adopted an inconsistent approach to interpreting plausibility standards. The author also recommends balancing human vulnerability with plausibility in human rights cases to indicate provisional measures.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Liverpool Law Review is a tri-annual journal of contemporary domestic, European and international legal and social policy issues. The Journal aims to provide articles, commentaries and reviews across a wide range of theoretical and practical legal and social policy matters - including public law, private law, civil and criminal justice, international law, ethics and legal theory. The Journal has many international subscribers and regularly publishes important contributions from the U.K. and abroad. Articles and commentaries are published with sufficient speed to ensure that they are truly current.
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