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HUMR5140 Human Rights in International and National Law Autumn 2017

HUMR5140 Human Rights in International and National Law Autumn 2017. Lecture 3: The Scope of Application of Human Rights Treaties. The development of human rights. Idealisation. ONGOING. Phase 1:. Three phases. Positivisation. Re- idealisation. ONGOING.

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HUMR5140 Human Rights in International and National Law Autumn 2017

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  1. HUMR5140 Human Rights in International and National LawAutumn 2017 Lecture 3: The Scope of Application of Human Rights Treaties

  2. The development of human rights Idealisation ONGOING Phase 1: Three phases Positivisation Re-idealisation ONGOING Normativisation and realisation ONGOING

  3. Phase 1: Idealisation Phase 2: Positivisation Phase 3: Realisation Human Rights Law Enjoyment of Life –Rule of Law Fear and Want – Rule by Power

  4. Phase 2: Positivisation The transformation of ideals into normative standards • First generation: • Civil and political rights • Liberté Early norms pertaining to conduct during armed conflicts • Second generation: • Economic, social and cultural rights • Egalité Important step: UDHR 1948 Morality to law From ancient times to 1900 Soft law to hard law …but was it the first step? A necessary sidestep: Three «generations» Early 20th Century Fourth generation? • Third generation: • Group and collective rights • Fraternité French «Rights of Man», 1789 Code of Hammurabi, 1700 BC US Declaration of Independence, 1776 Magna Carta, 1215 English Bill of Rights, 1688 Peace of Augsburg, 1555 Habeas Corpus Act, 1679 International law to domestic law

  5. Phase 2: Positivisation • Bolshevism • Favoring equality and economic rights (egalitè) • The Soviet was not just the Russian state, but the spokesperson for the world. • Leon Trotsky: we will ”issue some revolutionary proclamations to the peoples [of the world] and then close up the joint.” • Wilsonianism • Favoring individual liberalism (libertè) • U.S. President Woodrow Wilson: the USA model is the ”flag not only of America but of humanity.” • ‘We are running a race with Bolshevism, and the world is on fire.’ Early 20th Century L I B E R A L I S M vs. E Q U A L I T Y

  6. Phase 2: Positivisation Early 20th Century Attempted positivisation with the League of Nations • Minority rights • Right to health • Anti-slavery • Women’s rights • Labour rights

  7. Phase 2: Positivisation Economic collapse 20th Century Early 20th Century

  8. Phase 2: Positivisation Devastation of World War II 20th Century Shanghai, China Dresden, Germany London, UK Manilla, The Philippines

  9. Phase 2: Positivisation Brutality of the State 20th Century Nanking massacre German Program to kill handicapped people because they were ‘costly’ to Taxpayers – ‘life unworthy of living’ German forces detain and kill undesirable citizens Japanese forces burying prisoners alive

  10. Phase 2: Positivisation The destructive power of States demonstrated 20th Century USA Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima in 1945 First Soviet Test of an Atomic Bomb in 1949 First Chinese Test of an Atomic Bomb in 1964

  11. Phase 2: Positivisation Modern positivisation 20th Century The UN Charter After World War II San Francisco Conference Drafting of the UN Charter (1945) 1st Session of the UN General Assembly Central Hall in London (10 Jan 1946)

  12. Phase 2: Modern positivisation The UN Charter After World War II Preamble Determined … to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights The United Nations shall promote … universal respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion. The purposes of the United Nations are … To achieve international co-operation in … promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language, or religion; Art. 1 Arts. 55 and 56 All Members pledge themselves to take joint and separate action in co-operation with the Organization for the achievement of the purposes set forth in Article 55.

  13. Phase 2: Modern positivisation The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) After World War II Renè Cassin from France The UN General Assembly unanimously proclaimed the UDHR as a ”common standard of achievement” P.C. Chang from China, Eleanor Roosevelt from USA, John Humphrey from Canada (of UN Secretariat), Charles Malik from Lebanon, Vladimir Koretsky from the USSR

  14. Phase 2: Modern positivisation The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) After World War II Legal status? UNGA resolution, legally non-binding International customary law The International Bill of Rights Content? Bridged the gap between CP and ESC rights …and the gap re-emerged? Both CivPol and EcoSocCul rights Art. 1: All human beings are born free and equal Arts. 3-21: Civil and political rights Arts. 22-27: Economic, social and cultural rights Art. 2: The basic principle of non-discrimination ICCPR ICESCR

  15. Phase 2: Modern positivisation After World War II Positivisation and realisation: Some challenges and developments • A “World Court for Human Rights”? • The recognition of grave human rights violations as a justification for intervention • Individual international responsibility for violations of human rights law • The responsibility of non-state actors • NCHR research project: The legitimacy of multi-level human rights judiciary • The “legalisation” of international relations • The fragmentation of human rights tribunals • A focus on the “wrong” human rights…? International human rights treaties The International Bill of Rights Other regional and international human rights instruments Vienna Declaration 1993: «All human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent and interrelated.» Integrated interpretation A category of fundamental rights? No formal hierarchy of norms

  16. Scope of application of human rights treaties Personal scope of application Material scope of application Territorial scope of application Temporal scope of application

  17. Or duties? To which subjects do treaties apply? Personal scope of application Who have obligations? Who have rights? The active dimension The passive dimension States Individuals Companies International organisations

  18. North Korea denounced the ICCPR in August 1997 – invalid If a human rights treaty explicitly allows denunciation, a State may do so Silence on the issue prevents denunciation? HRC GC 26 (5) CMW ACHR CRPD CRC CAT CERD Human rights treaties apply at all times… Continuing situations Denunciation …even during armed conflicts Beginning End Temporal scope of application Objective A treaty must be in force for the state in question Subjective

  19. …over territory 1 Problem: Scope of material application General jurisdictional clauses Exercise of authority and control …or over an individual Rebuttable presumption Exceptional circumstances 2 Jurisdictional clauses in respect of specific provisions Three categories of treaties Exception 1: Intraterritorial non-application Exception 2: Extraterritorial application 3 No jurisdictional clauses Territorial scope of application Primarily territorial Territory and jurisdiction

  20. Case study # 1: Art. 2(1) ICCPR • ”Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to respect and to ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the present Covenant, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.” within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction During the negotiating history, clear understanding that such wording would limit the obligations to within a Party's territory. • HRC, Lopez Burgos 1979: ”[I]t would be unconscionable to […] permit a State party to perpetrate violations of the Covenant on the territory of another State, which violations it could not perpetrate on its own territory. • ICJ, Wall Decision (Adv. Opinion), 2004: • The CCPR obligations extend to ”acts done by a State in the exercise of its jurisdiction outside of its own territory.” • CCPR General Comment 31 (2004), para. 10: • Obligations towards “all persons who may be within their territory and to all persons subject to their jurisdiction”, i.e., “to anyone within the power or effective control of that State Party, even if not situated within the territory of the State Party.” USA: Hence, based on the plain and ordinary meaning of its text, this Article establishes that States Parties are required to ensure the rights in the Covenant only to individuals who are both within the territory of a State Party and subject to that State Party’s sovereign authority. HRC: The State party should review its approach and interpret the Covenant in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to its terms in their context, including subsequent practice, and in the light of its object and purpose.

  21. Case study # 2: Art. 1 ECHR • The High Contracting Parties shall secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in Section I of this Convention. Preparatory works? Object and purpose? Al-Skeini case

  22. Civil and political rights Material scope of application Which rights are protected by a treaty? Economic, social and cultural rights General vs. specific treaties Challenge: Merits vs. admissibility

  23. Application of international humanitarian law Other norm conflicts Treaties apply UN Charter Art. 103 Scope of application of human rights treaties Personal scope of application Material scope of application Human rights treaties apply at all times… …even during armed conflicts …unless there exist circumstances that modify or exclude the application Spatial scope of application Temporal scope of application Reservations Derogations Limitations Denunciations

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