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International Law in a Changing International System
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 1999
Abstract
To see what international law can offer in an apparently chaotic and fast changing world is far from easy. But it is only by examining and trying to understand the evolving international system that some answers may be found, because international law and international relations are in a symbiotic relationship.
The characterising features of the contemporary international system are globalisation on the one hand and a unipolar power structure on the other. The former is having a significant impact on international law as by its very nature actors are engaged in transactions across State boundaries in alliances that are not bounded by nationality. Modern technology facilitates these alliances of interest and gives an unprecedented voice to non-State actors, whether in human rights, in environmental matters or in international markets.
The concentration of military power in the United States had led to various incremental changes in authorisations of force by the United Nations, whether for peacekeeping or for enforcement actions. The evolving relationship between the United Nations and NATO has negative as well as positive factors and needs careful monitoring.
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Footnotes
This article reproduces, with small stylistic changes, the text of the Rede Lecture, delivered in the University of Cambridge on 22 October 1998.
References
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2 E.g. General Assembly Resolutions 1514 (XV); 1541 (XV); 2625 (XXV); 2229 (XXI).
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26 For a recent acknowledgment of the importance that could be made by hearing legal submissions from non-governmental organisations, notwithstanding the absence of any relevant rule of practice to authorise such intervention, see the legal pleadings on behalf of Amnesty International and certain other NGOs in the Pinochet case in the appeal in the House of Lords (November 1998).
27 E.g. during the negotiations for the Kyoto Protocol to the Framework Convention on Climate Change.
28 These observations are made by Sands, op. cit., n. 25 above.
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43 Since the delivery of this lecture matters at Rambouillet have developed further, raising a further deeply problematic question: does the refusal of a state which has apparently violated human rights to allow international peacekeeping forces on its territory, give legality to NATO bombing raids?
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