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faculty: "FdR" and publication year: "2011"
| Author | C. Ahlborn | | Title | The rules of international organizations and the law of international responsibility |
| Publisher | Amsterdam Center for International Law |
| Place | Amsterdam |
| Year | 2011 |
| Pages | 59 |
| Title series | ACIL research paper |
| Series number | 2011-03 |
| Faculty | Faculty of Law |
| Institute/dept. | FdR: Amsterdam Center for International Law (ACIL) |
| Abstract | This paper discusses the role of the so-called "rules of the organization" in the draft Articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations (DARIO), adopted by the International Law Commission (ILC) on first reading. While the rules of the organization occupy a central place in the DARIO, the ILC has decided not to take a "clear-cut view" on their legal nature as either international law or internal law of the organization. This paper argues that the ILC’s indecision has left the DARIO with a fluctuating scope of application concerning various provisions such as the attribution of conduct, the breach of an international obligation, the obligation to make reparation, and countermeasures against an international organization. Since the rules of the organization are a term of art that was developed by the ILC in its work on the law of treaties and has rarely been addressed in legal scholarship, Part 1 examines the legal nature of the different components of the rules of the organization: the constituent instruments, the acts, and the established practice of the organization. While the constituent instruments are contracts between States at the moment of the creation of an international organization, they operate as constitutions during the life of the organization, giving it the autonomy to create internal law in force between the subjects of its legal order, including its member States. Part 2 therefore suggests to reconceive the rules of the organization as "internal law" of the organization as long as the organization functions effectively so as to appropriately reflect an international organization’s constitutional autonomy for purposes of international responsibility. |
| Note | 26 April 2011 |
| Document type | Report |
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