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The legal consequences of jus cogens and the individuation of norms

Linderfalk, Ulf LU (2020) In Leiden Journal of International Law 33(4). p.893-909
Abstract

International law ascribes to the conferral of a jus cogens status on a norm a particular legal significance. Bluntly put, jus cogens norms have legal consequences that norms of ordinary international law do not. International lawyers have a great many different ideas of what these legal consequences are more precisely. As of yet, the reason for this divide has not been fully clarified. This void tends to confuse jus cogens discourse on several issues such as the immunity of states and state officials in judicial proceedings originating in the violation of jus cogens norms, or the extradition of alleged perpetrators of international crimes, or again the non-applicability of amnesty laws concerning such crimes. It also impedes the... (More)

International law ascribes to the conferral of a jus cogens status on a norm a particular legal significance. Bluntly put, jus cogens norms have legal consequences that norms of ordinary international law do not. International lawyers have a great many different ideas of what these legal consequences are more precisely. As of yet, the reason for this divide has not been fully clarified. This void tends to confuse jus cogens discourse on several issues such as the immunity of states and state officials in judicial proceedings originating in the violation of jus cogens norms, or the extradition of alleged perpetrators of international crimes, or again the non-applicability of amnesty laws concerning such crimes. It also impedes the justification of judicial and other legal decisions. As this article argues, contrary to the general assumption, a lawyer's conception of the legal consequences of jus cogens is not theory-neutral but dependent on his or her preferred understanding of the concept of law. The argument goes briefly as follows: (i) What causes international lawyers to disagree is the issue of whether or not jus cogens norms entail obligations concerned with their own enforcement; (ii) this is essentially an issue concerning the individuation of norms; (iii) depending on whether a lawyer takes the position of a legal positivist or a legal idealist, he or she uses different criteria for the individuation of jus cogens norms; and (iv) this is why, for legal idealists, jus cogens norms entail obligations concerned with their own enforcement, whereas for legal positivists they do not.

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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Concept of law, Individuation of norms, Jus cogens, Legal consequences, Rationality of international legal discourse
in
Leiden Journal of International Law
volume
33
issue
4
pages
17 pages
publisher
CUP
external identifiers
  • scopus:85095711501
ISSN
0922-1565
DOI
10.1017/S0922156520000357
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
86faa467-e57b-4b47-8e4d-e4d5a6bf0156
date added to LUP
2020-12-09 15:24:03
date last changed
2022-10-12 13:18:21
@article{86faa467-e57b-4b47-8e4d-e4d5a6bf0156,
  abstract     = {{<p>International law ascribes to the conferral of a jus cogens status on a norm a particular legal significance. Bluntly put, jus cogens norms have legal consequences that norms of ordinary international law do not. International lawyers have a great many different ideas of what these legal consequences are more precisely. As of yet, the reason for this divide has not been fully clarified. This void tends to confuse jus cogens discourse on several issues such as the immunity of states and state officials in judicial proceedings originating in the violation of jus cogens norms, or the extradition of alleged perpetrators of international crimes, or again the non-applicability of amnesty laws concerning such crimes. It also impedes the justification of judicial and other legal decisions. As this article argues, contrary to the general assumption, a lawyer's conception of the legal consequences of jus cogens is not theory-neutral but dependent on his or her preferred understanding of the concept of law. The argument goes briefly as follows: (i) What causes international lawyers to disagree is the issue of whether or not jus cogens norms entail obligations concerned with their own enforcement; (ii) this is essentially an issue concerning the individuation of norms; (iii) depending on whether a lawyer takes the position of a legal positivist or a legal idealist, he or she uses different criteria for the individuation of jus cogens norms; and (iv) this is why, for legal idealists, jus cogens norms entail obligations concerned with their own enforcement, whereas for legal positivists they do not.</p>}},
  author       = {{Linderfalk, Ulf}},
  issn         = {{0922-1565}},
  keywords     = {{Concept of law; Individuation of norms; Jus cogens; Legal consequences; Rationality of international legal discourse}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{893--909}},
  publisher    = {{CUP}},
  series       = {{Leiden Journal of International Law}},
  title        = {{The legal consequences of jus cogens and the individuation of norms}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0922156520000357}},
  doi          = {{10.1017/S0922156520000357}},
  volume       = {{33}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}