Book contents
- Consenting to International Law
- ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory
- Consenting to International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Consenting to International Law
- Part I Notions and Roles of Consent
- 1 Consenting Is Not Willing
- 2 State Consent and the Legitimacy of International Law
- 3 Controlling Consent
- 4 International Organizations and the Disaggregation of Consent
- 5 Consenting to International Law in Five Moves
- Part II Objects and Types of Consent
- Part III Subjects and Institutions of Consent
- Index
4 - International Organizations and the Disaggregation of Consent
from Part I - Notions and Roles of Consent
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2023
- Consenting to International Law
- ASIL Studies in International Legal Theory
- Consenting to International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Consenting to International Law
- Part I Notions and Roles of Consent
- 1 Consenting Is Not Willing
- 2 State Consent and the Legitimacy of International Law
- 3 Controlling Consent
- 4 International Organizations and the Disaggregation of Consent
- 5 Consenting to International Law in Five Moves
- Part II Objects and Types of Consent
- Part III Subjects and Institutions of Consent
- Index
Summary
The author examines how ‘consent’, traditionally taken as a foundational element in international law, fares in the context of international organizations (hereafter IOs). The central argument is that IOs, both as actors consenting to international law and as institutional spaces for other actors doing so, have changed the operation or even the nature of consent in international law as they have made the components of the act of consent disaggregate. The author argues that the IO’s expression of consent has become detached from the psychological or ‘intentional’ state that is presumed to be underlying in the legal subject. Where the organization appears as an institutional space for the consent of others, the object of consent in many instances is detached especially in substance from the normative effect created for the consent-giver.
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- Consenting to International Law , pp. 100 - 116Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023