Home
Current Issue
Developments
Archive
Table of Contents
Surveys
Book Reviews
Discussion Forum
Information
Reading Room
Links of Interest
Search
Join our email list
Translate this page
  

Previous PageTable of ContentsNext Page

Epilogue to an Endless Debate: The International Criminal Court's Third Party Jurisdiction and the Looming Revolution of International Law

Frédéric Mégret

Full text available: PDF format *

Abstract

Ever since the adoption of the Rome Statute, the debate over third party jurisdiction triggered by US opposition to the International Criminal Court (ICC) has been raging without any obvious outcome in sight. This article takes a look at one of the latest academic formulations of the evolving US stance which suggests that, to the extent that the ICC will adjudicate what are effectively inter-state matters, it should defer to state sovereignty. The article finds both the legal underpinning and the political rationale to that argument unconvincing as such. As sometimes happens, however, the argument is less interesting for what it says, as for what it reveals about evolving attitudes to the structure of international law. Indeed, it is suggested that part of the current misunderstanding over the ICC is traceable to a fundamental tension within international law between neo-Grotian and neo-Kantian trends. A better understanding of that tension can serve to reconstruct a narrative of the dialectics of individual and state responsibility under international law over the past half-century. The American stance is reassessed in this light, and some of the implications for the future of the ICC and what may yet turn out to be a revolution in international law are outlined.

* The free viewer (Acrobat Reader) for PDF file is available at the Adobe Systems.

Previous PageTable of ContentsNext Page





Top of Page

© 1990-2004 European Journal of International Law
All comments and suggestions should be sent to webmaster
This site is part of the Academy of European Law online, a joint partnership of the Jean Monnet Center at NYU School of Law and the Academy of European Law at the European University Institute.
This file was last modified: Tuesday, October 14, 2003 01:49PM