36 research outputs found
Las cláusulas de elementos esenciales de los acuerdos comerciales de la UE: ¿Contribuye la política comercial de la UE a la protección de los Derechos Humanos?
Este artículo examina de una manera crítica la política europea de incluir cláusulas de ‘elementos esenciales’ en acuerdos comerciales, como principal medio para la realización del nexo comercio-derechos humano exigido por la obligación de la UE de articular sus relaciones externas para la promoción de sus valores fundamentales. Después de estudiar la anatomía de dichas cláusulas, el artículo se propone analizar las críticas que estas cláusulas han generado en relación con (i) el hecho de que no todos los acuerdos comerciales de la UE contienen estas cláusulas, (ii) su redacción y alcance, y (iii) su evaluación e implementación. El artículo concluirá con una valoración de la efectividad y legitimidad de esta política y de la manera en la que influye sobre la credibilidad del programa normativo de las relaciones exteriores de UE.
Recibido: 17 abril 2015
Aceptado: 11 junio 2015
Publicación en línea: 15 abril 201
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负责任商业行为与企业赔付的国家联络点:20年的成就和挑战
National Contact Points for Responsible Business Conduct, the remedy mechanism built into the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, have just celebrated 20 years. This Perspective reviews their main assets and achievements since their creation and offers suggestions on how to enhance their contribution to remedying corporate impacts worldwide
Dispute Settlement for Labour Provisions in EU Free Trade Agreements: Rethinking Current Approaches
While labour provisions have been inserted in a number of EU free trade agreements (FTAs), extant clauses are widely perceived as ineffective. This article argues that there is a need to rethink the dispute settlement mechanisms related to labour provisions if their effectiveness is to be increased. It proceeds in three steps. First, we look at the current state of the art of labour provisions in EU FTAs in terms of legal design and practice and argue that the current arrangements are ill-equipped to foster compliance with labour standards. Second, we explore avenues to enhance the design of FTA labour provisions by reconsidering basic elements of the dispute settlement structure. Examining US FTA labour provisions, we highlight the importance of a formal complaint mechanism, on the one hand, and the availability of economic sanctions, on the other. Based on a review of existing practice, we contend, however, that these elements alone are not sufficient to effectively enforce FTA labour provisions. We argue that for FTA labour provisions to be effective, the current state-to-state model of dispute settlement needs to be complemented by a third-party-state dimension and that, additionally, there are good reasons to consider a third party–third party dispute settlement component. We ground these reflections in experiences with already existing instruments in other areas, namely investor-state dispute settlement and voluntary sustainability standards. Thirdly, we discuss options to better connect the dispute settlement mechanisms of FTA labour provisions to other international instruments for labour standards protection with a view to creating synergies and avoiding fragmentation between the different regimes. The focus here is on the International Labour Organization’s supervisory mechanism and the framework of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
Perspectives for the emergence of an international rule of law in a global governance context - normative benchmarks for a global rule of law.
The rule of law has historically been considered as an ideal of social ordering, and is increasingly invoked in relation to the international context. Doubts remain as to the meaning of the concept and as to its applicability to the international realm, the regulation of which is increasingly described in terms of a pluralistic and heterogeneous global governance . This PhD thesis shall first attempt to clarify the notion of rule of law in the global governance context. This clarified notion shall then be tested against real-life instances of global governance, namely in food safety standard-setting. The thesis shall conclude by delineating a normative framework for reflecting upon global governance from a rule of law perspective, and offer prospects as to the possible emergence of a global rule of law . Finally, it shall address practical recommendations to global governance actors as to how to promote a global rule of law.CONTENTS IV
ILLUSTRATIONS VI
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS VII
ABBREVIATIONS IX
I. INTRODUCTION 1
I.1 CAN ANOTHER THESIS ON THE RULE OF LAW SAY ANYTHING NEW? 1
I.1.1 A contingent ideal: The rule of law between chaos and capture 1
I.1.2 Globalization: The new oppression? 8
I.2 AIM AND METHOD 11
II. THE RULE OF LAW AS AN IDEAL 16
II.1 THE TERMS OF THE DEBATE 17
II.1.1 Historical underpinnings 18
II.1.2 The functions of the rule of law: Individual freedom v. social project 21
II.1.3 The various plies of the rule of law 26
II.1.3.1 Thin and formal conceptions 29
II.1.3.1.1 Legality 29
II.1.3.1.2 Legal certainty 31
II.1.3.1.3 Institutional and procedural elements 32
II.1.3.1.4 Critique: The formal rule of law falls short of the ideal 37
II.1.3.2 Thick and substantive conceptions 43
II.1.3.2.1 Substantive limitations to government power 44
II.1.3.2.2 Critique: Legal substance is a matter of philosophy and politics 49
II.1.4 Conclusion: The art of legal systems 51
II.2 THE RULE OF ‘VALID’ LAW 54
II.2.1 Rule by law and rule of the law 55
II.2.2 Authority as the decisive factor 59
II.2.3 Validity as determinative of the law’s authority 65
II.2.3.1 Definition of legal validity and the shaping of legal systems 66
II.2.3.2 Validity as justification: The translation of validity into authority 69
II.2.3.3 Different conceptions of validity and whether they justify authority 79
II.2.3.3.1 Jusnaturalism 80
II.2.3.3.2 Realism 86
II.2.3.3.3 Positivism 90
II.2.3.3.3.1 The rule of recognition and the basic norm 92
II.2.3.3.3.1.1 Hart’s rule of recognition: Collapse into realism? 92
II.2.3.3.3.1.2 Kelsen’s basic norm: Collapse into jusnaturalism? 96
II.2.3.3.3.1.3 Conclusion: Faith as the foundation of the rule of law? 101
II.2.3.3.3.2 Raz’ service conception of authority 102
II.2.3.3.3.3 Inclusive legal positivism 107
II.2.3.3.4 Conclusion 111
II.3 A TRIPLE JUSTIFICATION: LEGALITY, EFFECTIVENESS, LEGITIMACY 113
II.3.1 Legalistic and social dimensions of validity: A tridimensional theory 116
II.3.2 Tridimensional validity and its consequences for the rule of law 127
II.3.2.1 Blurring perceptions of legal validity and authority 128
II.3.2.2 A cumbersome validation and justification process 135
II.3.2.3 Tridimensional validity: Beneficial on balance 138
II.3.3 The three components of validity and their justificatory potential 141
II.3.3.1 Legality: Cognitive justification 141
II.3.3.2 Effectiveness: Instrumental justification 148
II.3.3.2.1 The existence of effects 149
II.3.3.2.2 Effectiveness as performance 150
II.3.3.2.3 Effectiveness as acceptance 153
II.3.3.3 Legitimacy: Axiological justification 154
II.3.3.3.1 Legitimacy as process 159
II.3.3.3.2 Legitimacy as content 166
II.3.4 On the conditions for legality to act as a proxy for the rule of law 175
II.3.5 Conclusion on the rule of law as a function of tridimensional legal validity 183
II.4 FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE: THE RULE OF LAW AS A DIALECTICAL IDEAL 190
II.4.1 Dialectics, jurisgenerative politics, and connectedness 191
II.4.2 Can the rule of law be ‘promoted’? The case of the European Union 205
II.4.2.1 Promoting the rule of law in the EU 208
II.4.2.2 Promoting the rule of law in candidate countries 211
II.4.2.3 Promoting the rule of law in EU Member States 214
II.4.2.4 Promoting the rule of law abroad 224
II.4.2.5 Conclusion 233
III. PROMOTING THE RULE OF LAW IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE: A BENCHMARKS APPROACH 234
III.1 THE INCREASING RELEVANCE OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE 235
III.2 CURRENT APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONALIZING THE RULE OF LAW IDEAL 238
III.3 IS PRIVATE GLOBAL GOVERNANCE IN ANY WAY A LEGAL PHENOMENON, AND DOES IT WARRANT A RULE OF LAW CRITIQUE? 246
III.3.1 The private side of global governance 246
III.3.2 Law and private global governance 253
III.4 TOWARDS A BENCHMARKS APPROACH TO THE PROMOTION OF THE RULE OF LAW AT GLOBAL LEVEL 262
III.4.1 Global governance and legality: A plea for transparency 265
III.4.1.1 The question of knowledge 267
III.4.1.2 The question of mandate 270
III.4.1.3 The question of rationality 279
III.4.1.4 Conclusion: Legality, fragmentation and pluralism 281
III.4.2 Measuring effectiveness in global governance 283
III.4.2.1 Changing behavior 284
III.4.2.2 Solving problems 289
III.4.2.3 Setting general norms 294
III.4.2.4 Conclusion: Making global governance instrumental for society at large 296
III.4.3 Legitimacy: Is democracy possible at global level? 298
III.4.3.1 The meaning of legitimacy in global private governance 298
III.4.3.1.1 Democratic v. output legitimacy 300
III.4.3.1.2 Global democracy as public accountability 304
III.4.3.1.2.1 The question of the political community: demos v. public 305
III.4.3.1.2.2 Prospective and retrospective accountability 307
III.4.3.2 A glimpse at the practice 313
III.4.3.3 Concluding remarks 318
III.5 CONCLUSION: THE BENCHMARKS APPROACH IS NOT ANOTHER CHECKLIST 318
IV. THE VALUE AND HUMILITY OF LAW 323
BIBLIOGRAPHY 333
LEGISLATION AND TREATIES 333
CASE-LAW 333
SECONDARY SOURCES 334nrpages: 381status: publishe
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National Contact Points for responsible business conduct and access to remedy: Achievements and challenges after 20 years
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In Search of a Balanced Relationship: Public and Private Food Safety Standards and International Law
The purpose of this paper is thus to analyze how the interconnection between
international food safety standards and the rules of free trade is playing out and what
the end-result of such interplay is for the potentially conflicting objectives of free
trade and food safety. In performing this analysis, the paper opposes the merits of
two types of food safety standards, public and private standards, in order to
determine which of them is more likely to constitute an appropriate regulatory model
for transnational food safety in the context of the WTO-led liberalization of the
international trade in food products. The paper opposes two concrete examples of
such standards, namely the public Codex Alimentarius standards, which have been
assigned a formal role by the WTO; and the private GLOBALG.A.P. Standard for
agricultural products, which is developed in isolation from international trade rules.status: publishe