Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- Lost in Transition? Domestic Courts, International Law and Rule of Law ‘À la Carte’
- International Law in the Russian Courts in Transitional Situations
- Thickening the Rule of Law in Transition: The Constitutional Entrenchment of Economic and Social Rights in South Africa
- Judicial Activism and the Use of International Law as Gap-Filler in Domestic Law: The Case of Forced Disappearances Committed During the Armed Conflict in Nepal
- International Law and Iraqi Courts
- Constitutionalism without Governance: International Standards in the Afghan Legal System
- Understandings of International Law in Rwanda: A Contextual Approach
- Virtuous Flexibility. The Application of International Human Rights Norms by the Bosnian Human Rights Chamber
- War Crimes Chamber of the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Seeding “International Standards of Justice”?
- Prosecution of War Crimes in Bosnian Cantonal and District Courts: the Role of the Rule of Law
- War Crimes Prosecution in a Post-Conflict Era and a Pluralism of Jurisdictions: the Experience of the Belgrade War Crimes Chamber
- The Treatment of Occupation Legislation by Courts in Liberated Territories
- The Use and Abuse of International Law: Choice of Applicable Criminal Law in Post-Conflict East Timor
- Concluding Observations
Lost in Transition? Domestic Courts, International Law and Rule of Law ‘À la Carte’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- Lost in Transition? Domestic Courts, International Law and Rule of Law ‘À la Carte’
- International Law in the Russian Courts in Transitional Situations
- Thickening the Rule of Law in Transition: The Constitutional Entrenchment of Economic and Social Rights in South Africa
- Judicial Activism and the Use of International Law as Gap-Filler in Domestic Law: The Case of Forced Disappearances Committed During the Armed Conflict in Nepal
- International Law and Iraqi Courts
- Constitutionalism without Governance: International Standards in the Afghan Legal System
- Understandings of International Law in Rwanda: A Contextual Approach
- Virtuous Flexibility. The Application of International Human Rights Norms by the Bosnian Human Rights Chamber
- War Crimes Chamber of the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Seeding “International Standards of Justice”?
- Prosecution of War Crimes in Bosnian Cantonal and District Courts: the Role of the Rule of Law
- War Crimes Prosecution in a Post-Conflict Era and a Pluralism of Jurisdictions: the Experience of the Belgrade War Crimes Chamber
- The Treatment of Occupation Legislation by Courts in Liberated Territories
- The Use and Abuse of International Law: Choice of Applicable Criminal Law in Post-Conflict East Timor
- Concluding Observations
Summary
INTRODUCTION
For some time now, we have been told that the rule of law is high on the international agenda for several reasons: it brings political stability and prompts economic growth, and it is also central to sustainable development and contributes to international peace and security. Working around the hypothesis of an international version of the concept, I suggested that ‘the “rule of law” is undoubtedly one of the most powerful expressions in the modern world. In a sense, it has become an activity in itself, a mental-social phenomenon which exists within human consciousness and acts independently within physical social realities, like a pat on the back or a slap in the face.’ Indeed, it can be argued that the rule of law has become a ‘buzzword’ (‘buzzphrase’) in legal theory and political studies. To borrow from Ogden and Richard's philosophy of language, the rule of law is a formulation of ‘hurrah!’ words; that is to say, words that provoke a good feeling in those who voice or hear them.
On the more cynical side, Carothers observed: ‘[o]ne cannot get through a foreign policy debate these days without someone proposing the rule of law as a solution to the world's troubles.’ The United Nations has fuelled such criticism in recent years, including in the context of post-conflict states and other situations of transition. Witness, inter alia, the 2004 UN Secretary-General's report on the rule of law and transitional justice, the outcome document of the 2005 UN World Summit, with a full section on the rule of law, and the uninterrupted string of resolutions by the UN General Assembly, from 2006 to 2010, all entitled ‘The Rule of Law at the National and International Levels’, as well as the creation of a rule of law unit in the Executive Office of the UN Secretary-General and the many reports by UN officials on the rule of law since 2006. In short, perhaps the rule of law has been a victim of its own success because, as we all know, too much of a good thing can be harmful.
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- Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2012
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