国际经济法的证券化与“全球安全”——从共同商业政策的角度分析欧盟法律方法

Pub Date : 2023-06-28 DOI:10.4337/cilj.2023.01.07
L. Mola
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引用次数: 1

摘要

所谓的国际经济法“证券化”在很大程度上是以防御性安全例外为前提和制定的,即政府援引其国家安全利益来背离其国际经济义务。本文旨在通过探讨在国际经济法下处理基本安全利益的法律模式是否可以超越以国家为中心的国家安全利益,也包括全球安全威胁(如环境安全)引起的关切,为正在进行的关于此类安全驱动的单边措施与国际法以及当前全球治理体系之间的兼容性的辩论做出贡献。在此过程中,本文将重点关注欧盟(EU)所采取的相关方法,特别是根据《欧盟运作条约》第207条实施的欧盟共同商业政策(CCP)。欧盟在制定和实施其贸易和投资政策方面享有广泛的专有权,无论是在内部监管方面还是在外部行动方面。在这种情况下,必然会出现安全方面的考虑。本文探讨了一系列源于欧盟或由欧盟缔结的相关法律文书,并分析了这些法律文书是如何纳入安全考虑的,以及欧盟对其中安全概念的理解。在考虑了欧盟主要法律下的安全问题后,本文回顾了欧盟作为双边条约参与者所采取的立场,参考了与英国的《贸易与全面协定》,并作为世界贸易组织的成员,特别是对《关税与贸易总协定》安全例外条款的解释。它还调查了欧盟在外国直接投资筛选、出口管制和外国补贴法规方面的内部行动,以及欧盟拟议的“反强制机制”和“全球人权制裁制度”。对欧盟多方面实践的分析表明,尽管全球安全问题可能日益成为合作和协调条款义务的基础,但在双边和多边条约实践中,现有的与安全相关的法律模式仍然以“国家安全”为中心;尽管国家安全的范围日益“扩大”,以包括更多的非军事威胁,但这种扩大几乎无法涵盖大量的全球安全威胁和脆弱性。
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The securitisation of international economic law and ‘global security’: an analysis of the EU law approach through the prism of the Common Commercial Policy
The so-called ‘securitisation’ of international economic law is largely premised and enacted on grounds of defensive security exceptions, whereby governments invoke their national security interests to depart from their international economic obligations. This article aims to contribute to the ongoing debate on the compatibility of such security-driven unilateral measures with international law and within the current system of global governance, by exploring whether legal patterns tackling essential security interests under international economic law may reach beyond State-centred national security interests to also encompass concerns arising from global security threats (such as environmental security). In doing so, this article focuses on the relevant approaches taken by the European Union (EU), particularly in the operation of the EU Common Commercial Policy (CCP) under Article 207 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. The EU enjoys broad exclusive competence in framing and implementing its trade and investment policy under the CCP, both in terms of its internal regulation and external action. In this context, security considerations are bound to arise. This article explores a series of relevant legal instruments originating from or concluded by the EU, and analyses how these incorporate security considerations and the EU’s understanding of the concept of security thereunder. After considering security under EU primary law, the article reviews the position taken by the EU as a bilateral treaty player, by reference to the Trade and Comprehensive Agreement with the United Kingdom, and as a member of the World Trade Organization, notably on the interpretation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade security exceptions clause. It also looks into EU internal action on foreign direct investment screening, export control and foreign subsidies regulations, as well as the EU’s proposed ‘anti-coercion mechanism’ and its ‘global human rights sanction regime’. The analysis of the EU’s multifaceted practice shows that while global security concerns may increasingly underlie obligations to cooperate and coordination clauses, existent security-related legal patterns in bilateral and multilateral treaty practice remain ‘national security’-centred; and despite the increasing ‘enlargement’ of the scope of national security to encompass additional non-military threats, the vast array of global security threats and vulnerabilities are hardly covered by this expansion.
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