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Chasing the Frontier in Humanitarian Intervention Law: The Case for Aequitas ad Bellum
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 August 2015
Abstract
The question whether humanitarian intervention may ever be lawfully carried out unilaterally outside the scope of Chapter VII of the UN Charter has captured the interest of many for years. Faced with legal formalist arguments under the UN Charter, those otherwise favouring the idea of humanitarian intervention often retreat into an apologist stance by conceding too quickly the lack of cogent legal justifications therefor, preferring instead to rely on moral and ethical reasoning. The doctrine of Responsibility to Protect, while seemingly promising when first mooted in 2001, has since effectively been rendered obsolete as a justification for unilateral humanitarian intervention following the UN World Summit in 2005. By examining the role that equity plays in Article 38(1)(c) of the ICJ Statute, this paper advances the view that an aequitas ad bellum exists in international law that, under certain strict conditions, enables unilateral humanitarian intervention to be lawfully carried out.
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Footnotes
Assistant Registrar, Supreme Court of Singapore. LLB (National University of Singapore); LLM (Harvard University). The author would like to register his gratitude to Professor Gabriella Blum for her comments on an earlier draft of this paper. The views expressed in this paper are the author’s personal views and do not in any way represent the views of the Supreme Court of Singapore. Any error in the paper is solely the author’s.
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115. Ibid., at 139.
116. [1962] I.C.J. 6 (15 June).
117. Ibid., at 23.
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119. Ibid., at [311].
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137. Ibid., at 302. At 306, Burke wrote: “Equity exists … to fill the gaps (praeter legem) which exist within the legal structure in order to rectify manifest injustices that would otherwise occur.”
138. Ibid., at 310.
139. Ibid., at 314.
140. Ibid.
141. See accompanying text to supra note 128.
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144. Ibid., at 320.
145. See accompanying text to supra note 67.
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Law as integrity denies that statements of law are either the backward-looking factual reports of conventionalism or the forward-looking instrumental programs of legal pragmatism. It insists that legal claims are interpretive judgments and therefore combine backward- and forward-looking elements; they interpret contemporary legal practice seen as an unfolding political narrative.
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[I]f the Security Council because of lack of unanimity of the permanent members, fails to exercise its primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security in any case where there appears to be a threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression, the General Assembly shall consider the matter immediately with a view to making appropriate recommendations to Members for collective measures, including in the case of a breach of the peace or act of aggression, the use of armed force when necessary, to maintain or restore international peace and security.
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154. Annan, supra note 1.
155. For the purposes of this paper, the distinction between a non liquet and a situation having too many competing norms is not of great significance. In fact, the two concepts may be compatible, particularly considering the nature of international law, because a non liquet often may be seen as a predicate to the rise of competing norms advocated by different norm entrepreneurs on the subject in question.
156. This, of course, is independent of the question of whether the individual states in the international community do in fact intervene, since the decision whether to carry out intervention may be affected by a variety of non-legal considerations in every state.
157. See accompanying text to supra note 134.
158. To the extent that Burke’s writing omits to provide any illumination in this regard, the equitable framework as argued by Burke is incomplete.
159. Supra note 128.
160. This is a well-established equitable principle that exemplifies equity’s preference for substance over form. See e.g. the English case of Walsh v. Lonsdale [1882] 21 Ch. D. 9.
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163. See accompanying text to supra note 151.
164. Art. 38(1)(c) of the ICJ Statute.
165. See accompanying text to supra notes 147–156.
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168. See supra note 44.
169. Weiss, supra note 15 at 120.
170. Supra note 53.
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172. Address at Georgetown University on 23 February 1999; U.N. Doc. SG/SM/6901, P.K.O. 80.
173. 2005 World Summit, supra note 53 at [139].
174. Ibid.
175. See Bannon, supra note 54.
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179. Quotation reproduced in ibid., at 193 (emphasis added).
180. Ibid., at 189.
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185. Some writers have likened “excuse” to the domestic criminal-law doctrine of mitigation: see Franck, , supra note 34 at 179Google Scholar; Burke, , supra note 37 at 39Google Scholar.
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187. See also Rossi, supra note 2; Cheng, supra note 60 at 400; Burke, supra note 37 at chapter 3.
188. S/RES/1973 (2011). UN Security Council Resolution 1973 S/RES/1973 (2011) was preceded by UN Security Council Resolution 1970 S/RES/1970 (2011), where the UN Security Council deplored “the gross and systematic violation of human rights, including the repression of peaceful demonstrators, expressing deep concern at the deaths of civilians, and rejecting unequivocally the incitement to hostility and violence against the civilian population made from the highest level of the Libyan government”.
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