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33 - The International Court of Justice and the Security Council

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2009

Vaughan Lowe
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Malgosia Fitzmaurice
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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Summary

What the International Court and the Security Council have in common is their status as principal organs of the United Nations and their participation in the settlement of disputes. These factors influence the various relationships between the two bodies.

This chapter begins by an analysis of the parallelism in the functioning of the Court and the Council (first section). One specific point of that topic is negotiations by parties to a dispute which is simultaneously subject to judicial proceedings (second section). Another problem pertaining to parallelism is co-ordination resulting from a Council recommendation under article 36, paragraph 3 of the Charter (third section). Recently, there arose the question whether the Security Council has changed its hitherto adopted stance of correlating its competences with those of the Court and, consequently, whether it would no longer hesitate to restrain the Court. Is this the lesson of Lockerbie? The matter is dealt with in the fourth section, while the fifth takes up the discussion on the related though more general issue of the existence or non-existence of an exclusive competence of the Security Council. Some attention has also been devoted to the hypothesis of a judicial review of the Council decisions (sixth section).

This writer does not comment on the Council measures to give effect to the Court's judgments (article 94, paragraph 2 of the Charter). This is mainly due to the necessity of keeping the size of this chapter within certain limits.

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Chapter
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Fifty Years of the International Court of Justice
Essays in Honour of Sir Robert Jennings
, pp. 606 - 629
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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