79 research outputs found
Germany versus Italy Reloaded: Whither a Human Rights Limitation to State Immunity?
The present essay seeks to discuss the possible scenarios arising from the renewed Jurisdictional Immunities case before the ICJ triggered by Germany's application against Italy filed at the end of March 2022. The purpose is to evaluate what these scenarios may signify for the ‘human rights and State immunity’ debate. In doing so, attention is paid to a number
of elements arising from the pertinent practice and scholarly discussions
which have emerged since the 2012 ICJ judgment. If Germany v
Italy (reloaded) proceeds to the merits, those elements should hopefully
induce the ICJ to rethink a few controversial aspects of its 2012 decision
and, in turn, the Italian Constitutional Court to exercise caution when
setting out to revisit and circumscribe Judgment No 238/2014
Armed Conflicts and the Environment: An Assessment of Principle 24 of the Rio Declaration Thirty Years On
This paper assesses the history and significance of Principle 24 of the Rio Declaration, which in 1992 called upon States to respect international law providing protection for the environment in times of armed conflict and to cooperate in its further development. In particular, the paper explores how the key elements of the principle have influenced subsequent law- and policy-making processes led by institutions such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, the UN Environment Programme, and the International Law Commission. The paper argues that while Principle 24 does not contain specific normative prescriptions, it has translated over the years into a significant and vibrant international law standard. However, in the light of the gaps and shortcomings that continue to characterize the protection afforded to the environment under international humanitarian law, the paper emphasizes the need to develop a comprehensive multilateral convention on armed conflict and the environment, with the aim of bringing the vision of Principle 24 into completion
Stergiopoulos v. Iran. Order No. 39391/2021
In Angela Stergiopoulos v. Iran, the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation held that state immunity does not bar exequatur proceedings against a foreign state when those proceedings seek the recognition and enforcement of a foreign judicial decision finding the state responsible for serious breaches of human rights.
Stergiopoulos confirms the Italian courts’ persisting inclination to champion a human rights limitation to state immunity in contrast to mainstream transnational case law. It also reveals several legal and
policy risks arising out of that position. Yet the decision should be seen in the context of a new constellation of states prioritizing human rights enforcement over state immunity, including Brazil and, at least in the Court’s view, the United States, especially given the availability under U.S. law of proceedings against states sponsors of terrorism accused of certain egregious violations of human rights
The Sustainable Development Goals and International Environmental Law: Normative Value and Challenges for Implementation
This article explores the implications for international environmental law
of the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which
occurred at the 2015 United Nations Sustainable Development Summit.
Following a summary of the main outcomes of the Summit, the paper evaluates
the process and vision of the SDGs against both the Millennium
Development Goals and the past efforts of the UN General Assembly
in the field of sustainable development. The paper then
examines how the environmental dimension of the SDGs is integrated into
the general framework of the post-2015 development agenda and addresses
two important questions which will most likely prove instrumental in
the achievement of the Goals themselves. First, in the light of UN General
Assembly Resolution 70/1, it discusses the normative value of the environmental
obligations of States enshrined in the SDGs. Secondly, it deals with
problems of implementation of the outcomes of the Summit, and accordingly
attempts to identify the main legal challenges for the operationalization
of the environmental component of the SDGs, in the wider context of
the Agenda and taking the recent developments under the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change into account
Sovereign Immunity and the Enforcement of International Cultural Property Law
The present paper examines the intersection of the law of State immunity and cultural property issues. The primary interest in undertaking this investigation lies in the fact that, while immunity from seizure and other measures of constraint aims to protect and further the cultural and educational function of State cultural heritage property, immunity from jurisdiction (understood stricto sensu as immunity from suit) may bar legitimate restitution claims brought by individuals who have been unlawfully dispossessed of cultural objects. Therefore, a clear-cut and comprehensive solution to the problems raised by the expanding litigation in this area is not forthcoming. Customary and treaty obligations in the field of cultural heritage, such as the duty to return stolen cultural objects, are inconclusive in that regard and stand in the background as the reference materials guiding the analysis. What seems most needed is instead a wide-ranging balancing exercise that takes into account all of the values, interests and circumstances at stake in art-and-immunity cases. Obviously, this assumes that State immunity for jure imperii acts, such as the expropriation of property in times of armed conflict, should not be regarded as a dogma of contemporary international law. On the contrary, it is submitted that factors such as the alternative remedies available to dispossessed individuals or the commission of egregious breaches of human rights by the defendant State may well have a bearing on the enjoyment of sovereign immunity
After Sentenza 238: A Plea for Legal Peace
This post summarizes some of the key points of my presentation at the upcoming Villa Vigoni conference organized by the Max Planck Institute and its partners around the theme ‘Remedies against Immunity? Reconciling International and Domestic Law after the Italian Constitutional Court’s Sentenza 238/2014
Sovereign Immunity and the Enforcement of International Cultural Property Law
The present paper examines the intersection of the law of State immunity and cultural property issues. The primary interest in undertaking this investigation lies in the fact that, while immunity from seizure and other measures of constraint aims to protect and further the cultural and educational function of State cultural heritage property, immunity from jurisdiction (understood stricto sensu as immunity from suit) may bar legitimate restitution claims brought by individuals who have been unlawfully dispossessed of cultural objects. Therefore, a clear-cut and comprehensive solution to the problems raised by the expanding litigation in this area is not forthcoming. Customary and treaty obligations in the field of cultural heritage, such as the duty to return stolen cultural objects, are inconclusive in that regard and stand in the background as the reference materials guiding the analysis. What seems most needed is instead a wide-ranging balancing exercise that takes into account all of the values, interests and circumstances at stake in art-and-immunity cases. Obviously, this assumes that State immunity for jure imperii acts, such as the expropriation of property in times of armed conflict, should not be regarded as a dogma of contemporary international law. On the contrary, it is submitted that factors such as the alternative remedies available to dispossessed individuals or the commission of egregious breaches of human rights by the defendant State may well have a bearing on the enjoyment of sovereign immunity
Diritto alla tutela giurisdizionale effettiva e immunità degli Stati: irrompe la Corte di giustizia dell’Unione Europea
L'azione di risarcimento danni promossa contro il Registro Italiano Navale (RINA s.p.a.) da un gruppo di vittime (e loro eredi) del tragico naufragio del traghetto Al Salam Boccaccio ’98 battente bandiera panamense, avvenuto nel Mar Rosso nel 2006 e che costò la vita a più di 1.000 persone, è sfociata nella recente sentenza RINA della Corte di giustizia dell'UE. Dopo aver sintetizzato le statuizioni della Corte di giustizia
e discusso le indicazioni da esse desumibili in termini di rapporto tra competenza giurisdizionale ed immunità degli Stati, il presente scritto si sofferma sul passaggio
della sentenza RINA in cui la Corte sottolinea l'importanza del diritto fondamentale alla tutela giurisdizionale effettiva, cercando di interpretarne il significato
e valutarne il possibile impatto sulla prassi di diritto internazionale e dell'UE
Princípio 24
This comment assesses the history and significance of Principle 24 of the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, which called upon States to respect international law providing protection for the environment in times of armed conflict and to cooperate in its further development. In particular, this comment explores how the key elements of the principle have influenced subsequent law- and policy-making processes led by institutions such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, the UN Environment Programme, and the International Law Commission. It is argued that while Principle 24 does not contain specific normative prescriptions, it has translated over the years into a significant and vibrant international law standard. However, in light of the gaps and shortcomings that continue to characterize the protection afforded to the environment under international humanitarian law, the comment emphasizes the need to develop a comprehensive multilateral convention on armed conflict and the environment, with the aim of bringing the vision of Principle 24 into completion
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