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
The Use and Abuse of International Law: Choice of Applicable Criminal Law in Post-Conflict East Timor
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
In the process of empowering domestic institutions, particularly the judiciary, the use of international law is often perceived as a means of stabilizing the legal order, contributing to the protection of fundamental rights, and protecting the separation of powers. Legal scholarship which scrutinizes situations of postconflict reconstruction of legal systems often assumes implicitly, or even expressly, that reliance on international law as the source of substantive norms and processes is beneficial to the domestic system because international law imposes a more stringent standard for protection of human rights than domestic law does. However, international law operates at various levels and in various contexts, and in some of them it may have a destabilizing effect on the domestic system. Moreover, courts are often perceived as the guarantors of the application of international law, shielding individuals from the excesses of government. Yet, in practice, courts no less than other institutions may abuse their power, and such abuse carries particular weight as it is carried out under the guise of law.
This article concerns an incident in which the Court of Appeal of East Timor invoked international legal principles relating to the consequences of illegal annexation when determining the domestic law of East Timor under UN administration and after independence, without giving due regard to their implications in the field of human rights. Rather than enhance the post-conflict reconstruction, this invocation risked destabilizing the emerging political and legal apparatus; it could have brought about a fundamental transformation of East Timor's legal system. While the Court of Appeal's attempt to bring about this change was thwarted by the objection of the legal community and the legislature, the incident demonstrates that the recourse to international law must be discriminative so that it does not subvert the very purpose for which this law is invoked.
Section 1 of this article provides a brief background to the post-conflict process in East Timor. Section 2 describes the dilemma concerning the choice of applicable law in post-conflict East Timor, and the role of international law in shaping that choice, while section 3 examines the role that the Court of Appeal attached to international law with regard to the same question. Section 4 analyses the ruling of the Court of Appeal and the implications for domestic law of unqualified reliance on certain branches of international law.
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- Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2012