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Book Title: The Political Economy of International Law
Editor(s): Fabbricotti, Alberta
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN (hard cover): 9781785364396
Section: Chapter 4
Section Title: The Political Economy of Jus Cogens
Author(s): Stephan, Paul B.
Number of pages: 20
Abstract/Description:
This Chapter uses the history and function of the jus cogens concept in international law to demonstrate that its meaning and implication have varied in respond to particular sets of interests of significant international actors. The history reveals three incarnations of the concept: A claim about limits on the ability of sovereign States to enter into treaties that negate the essence of State sovereignty; a claim about limits on the formation of international law based on the fundamental interests of the States engaged in Cold War competition; and a claim about the existence of strong protection of human interests that exists independent of State consent. The principal argument of the Chapter is that the present, human-rights oriented conception of jus cogens is itself contingent and a reflection of the interests of persons who participate in the international legal system, especially non-State actors. The Chapter speculates about changes in the configuration of State interests that might produce new adaptions of the jus cogens concept, including doctrines and applications that would be fundamentally at odds with the current conception.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2016/895.html