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1 International Law and Organizations Chapter 2 © 2002 West /Thomson Learning
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2 What is International Law? A rule… that has been accepted as such by the international community in the form of... customary law… … international agreement… …general principles common to the major legal systems… Restatement of the Law 3rd
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3 Public International Law Deals with relationships between countries and applies “norms regarded as binding on all members of the international community” Example: Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
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4 Public International Law Pacta sunt servanda: “every treaty in force is binding upon the parties to it and must be performed in good faith.” Ius cogens: “preemptory norm of international law” (example: proscriptions against torture and genocide)
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5 Impact of treaties on business? Treaties involve public law but can apply to private transactions Tax treaties Law of the Sea convention Convention for the International Sale of Goods(CISG)
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6 International Court of Justice Known as the World Court 15 judges serving 9 year term UN General Assembly and Security Council elect Based in The Hague, Netherlands Only states can be parties and state must have accepted the court’s jurisdiction Case Examples: Liechtenstein v. Guatemala Nicaragua v. United States
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7 United Nations in Public International Law General Assembly (1 country, 1 vote) Security Council (15 members) 5 permanent members: China, France, Russia, U.K. and the U.S. 10 non permanent members elected every 2 years Permanent members have a veto over non-procedural issues
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8 Private International Law Conflict of laws Central role of different national legal systems Civil law & Common Law Socialist & Islamic law Comparative law
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9 Public and Private International Law Convention for the Sale of Goods (CISG) A convention or treaty that affects private transactions
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10 The Role of International Organizations International Monetary Fund World Bank GATT and WTO OECD
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11 The Role of Codes of Conduct Examples from NGO (non governmental organizations)- OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions World Diamond Congress – agt. to limit trade in “blood diamonds” Governmental examples - U.S. Model business Principles
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12 The Role of Ethics How to define what is ethical? The problem of “first world standards in the third world” Business attempts to address Codes of Conduct
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13 Human Rights, Ethics and Business Practices Increasingly complex Do we agree on “Universal Human Rights, or “animal rights?” History: business role in change in South Africa? Do we need more conventions? Likelihood of agreement? What should the role of business be in this debate?
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14 Cases: Chapter 2 The Paquette Habana United States v. Alvarez-Machain Liechtenstein v. Guatemala Matusevitch v. Telnikoff
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15 Paquette Habana Facts: Coastal fishing boats seized by U.S. as prizes of war Issue: Absent a treaty, does customary international law exempt fish vessels from capture as prizes of war? Decision: Yes, the Court took judicial notice of customary international law and concluded peaceful fisherman are exempt from capture. Note the Court’s review of historical precedent
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16 US v. Alvarez - Machain Facts: A was kidnapped in Mexico and taken to U.S. for arrest Issue: Is abduction of criminal defendant from a country with extradition treaty with U.S. a defense to jurisdiction of the US courts? Decision: No. Reasons: The treaty did not expressly prohibit abduction and general principles of international law do not prohibit such action. Implications of decision? Focus of the dissent?
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17 Liechtenstein v. Guatemala Facts: N born in Germany but resided in Guatemala; granted citizenship by Liechtenstein under special procedure; Guatemala seized N’s property during WWII; L sues G seeking damages Issue: Does ICJ have jurisdiction over case here? Decision: No; L can’t bring claim on behalf of N against G Reasons: G not required to recognize L’s grant of citizenship to N; L can’t bring claim for N against G in ICJ
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18 Matusevitch v. Telnikoff Facts: T sued M for libel in U.K., and seeks to enforce court judgment in U.S. courts Issue: Would enforcement of U.K. libel judgment in the U.S. deprive M his Constitutional rights? Decision: Yes, so court refuses to enforce U.K. judgment Reasons: Differences btwn U.K. and U.S. libel laws mean that enforcement would violate M’s 1 st & 14 th Amendments
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19 Web Sites http://www.wto.org http://www.tufts.edu/departments/fletc her/multi/chrono.html http://www.tufts.edu/departments/fletc her/multi/chrono.html http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/librar y http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/librar y http://www.un.org http://www.oecd.org
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