国际刑法国家化

IF 1 4区 社会学 Stanford Journal of International Law Pub Date : 2004-01-16 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.487102
J. I. Turner
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引用次数: 27

摘要

国际法学者通常认为,执行人权的最佳方式是建立强有力的国际机构,逐步发展法律并独立执行。政治现实主义者反驳说,这些机构只有在强大的国家允许它们发挥作用的情况下才会发挥作用,并且不鼓励对其职权的扩张愿景。最近成立的国际刑事法院(ICC)的支持者必须接受现实主义的挑战。他们必须相应地调整机构,而不是完全放弃对项目的希望。虽然国际刑事法院将受到其所掌握的国家支持的限制,但它可以通过鼓励和协助国家当局维护和执行国际法,在执行人权法方面发挥作用。国际刑事法院及其支持者必须决定该机构将如何使用其拥有的权力。本文认为,如果国际法院走一条集权和孤立的道路,它将遭遇来自成员国和美国的抵制,并且几乎不会带来其创始人所设想的和解和制度建设的好处。如果法院按照已经在塞拉利昂和东帝汶使用的混合法院的模式,同国家当局进行联合调查和审判,国际刑法的执行将更加符合参与国的意愿,这些国家将感到对这一进程的所有权和控制感。在这种新的、不那么占主导地位的作用下,法院甚至可能为美国所接受,因为美国的支持对法院的效力至关重要。国际刑事法院的混合法庭模式有望加强地方能力,并有助于重建全球各国的法治。它将推动国际人权法朝着其真正的朋友必须承认的最终是明智和必要的方向发展,即建立一个更有信息、更广泛接受和更好执行的法律体系。
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Nationalizing International Criminal Law
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing strong international institutions that develop the law progressively and enforce it independently. Political realists counter that such institutions are only as useful as powerful states permit them to be, and discourage expansive visions of their mandate. Partisans of the recently created International Criminal Court (ICC) must come to terms with the realist challenge. They must work to adapt the institution accordingly, without abandoning hope for the project altogether. Although the ICC will be constrained by the state support it commands, it can make a difference in the enforcement of human rights law by encouraging and assisting national authorities in upholding and enforcing international law. The ICC and its supporters must decide how the institution will use the powers it has. This Article argues that if the Court pursues a path of centralization and insularity, it will encounter resistance from member states and from the United States and bring about few of the benefits of reconciliation and institution-building that its founders envisioned. If the Court engages in joint investigations and trials with national authorities, along the model of mixed courts already in use in Sierra Leone and East Timor, enforcement of international criminal law will become more agreeable to the participating states, who will feel a sense of ownership and control over the process. In this new, less dominant role, the Court might even become acceptable to the United States whose support is critical for the Court's effectiveness. The mixed-court model for the ICC holds out the promise of strengthening local capacities and contributes to the rebuilding of the rule of law in nations around the globe. It would move international human rights law in directions that its true friends must admit are ultimately wise and necessary - toward a system of law that is better informed, more widely accepted, and better enforced.
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1966, the Stanford Journal of International Law is one of the oldest and most reputable international law journals in the United States. Publishing two regular issues each year, the journal seeks to promote scholarship of the highest quality through timely, innovative, and important pieces on international and comparative legal topics. The journal invites contributions from professors, practitioners, legislators, judges, and Stanford Law School students.
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