Part Ⅰ: The Framework 1
1.Structures of the international legal system 3
1.1 Introduction 3
1.2 Methodology:a rules-based approach 7
1.3 The engagement of individuals in the international legal system:structural issues 10
(a) Prelude:differing legal structures in the early period 10
(b) The long nineteenth century 13
(c) The inter-war period 16
(d) The post-1945 international legal system 26
1.4 International legal personality as the measure of engagement in the international legal system 29
(a) Development of the doctrine of subjects:the Reparations Opinion 30
(b) Sui generis subjects of international law 32
(c) The individual as a 'subject' of international law 36
1.5 Challenges to the centrality of states in the international legal system:alternative approaches 38
(a) Positivism in its classical and modern forms 40
(b) Process approaches 42
(c) 'Cosmopolitanism' 43
Part Ⅱ: The Individual in International Law 45
2. The individual and international claims 47
2.1 Introduction 47
2.2 Doctrine and practice pre-1914 48
(a) Vattel's articulation 49
(b) The practice 50
(ⅰ) Arbitration of specifically defined diplomatic protection claims 52
(ⅱ) Claims tribunals and commissions 54
(A) Control of the claim 55
(B) Payment of awards 57
(C) Binding effect of the decision on an inter-state basis 58
(D) Standing before the International Prize Court and the Central American Court of Justice 60
(c) Conclusions 62
2.3 Doctrine and practice in the inter-war period 65
(a) The development of doctrine 65
(b) The practice of international claims tribunals 71
(ⅰ) Mixed arbitral tribunals after the First World War 72
(A) The mixed arbitral tribunals under the Peace Treaties 72
(B) The US Mixed Claims Commissions 73
(C) The Upper Silesian Mixed Commission and Arbitral Tribunal 74
(ⅱ) Mexican Claims Commissions 1923-1932 77
(c) Conclusions 83
2.4 Diplomatic protection and individual claims after 1945 85
(a) The development of doctrine 85
(ⅰ) Diplomatic protection 85
(ⅱ) Individual rights 94
(b) International claims tribunals and commissions 97
(ⅰ) Post-Second World War commissions and tribunals 97
(ⅱ) The Iran-US Claims Tribunal 98
(ⅲ) The UN Compensation Commission 101
(c) Investment treaty arbitration 103
(d) Conclusions 119
2.5 Conclusions:the position of the individual relative to international claims 120
Appendix Ⅰ Arbitration of diplomatic protection claims 1794-1914 124
Appendix Ⅱ International claims tribunals and commissions 1794-1914 134
Appendix Ⅲ International claims tribunals and commissions 1919-1939 162
3. The individual in international humanitarian law 176
3.1 Introduction 176
3.2 The individual in international armed conflict 177
(a) Regulation of international war pre-1914 177
(b) Developments in the inter-war period 180
(c) The individual in international armed conflict after 1945 181
(ⅰ) The 1949 Geneva Conventions 182
(ⅱ) Additional Protocol I of 1977 189
(ⅲ) Customary international humanitarian law 191
(ⅳ) International human rights law applicable in international armed conflict 193
3.3 The individual in internal armed conflict 196
(a) Regulation of civil war pre-1914 198
(b) The inter-war period 206
(c) The individual in internal armed conflict after 1945 208
(ⅰ) Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions 208
(ⅱ) Additional Protocol II 213
(ⅲ) Customary international humanitarian law 219
(ⅳ) International human rights law applicable in non-international armed conflict 222
3.4 Conclusions:the position of the individual in international humanitarian law 224
4. The individual in international criminal law 229
4.1 Introduction 229
4.2 Individual responsibility before 1919 230
4.3 The inter-war period:the Kaiser and the Leipzig trials 234
4.4 Individual responsibility after 1945 241
(a) Post-Second World War prosecutions 241
(ⅰ) The Nuremberg Tribunal 241
(ⅱ) The Tokyo Tribunal 249
(ⅲ) Control Council Law No.10 trials and military commissions in the Pacific 251
(b) The 'Nuremberg Principles' 253
(c) Development of substantive international criminal law in the United Nations 258
(d) International criminal tribunals and courts 260
(ⅰ) Ad hoc international tribunals 261
(ⅱ) The International Criminal Court 267
(ⅲ) International crimes before 'hybrid' and domestic courts 271
4.5 Conclusions:the position of the individual in international criminal law 274
5. The individual in international human rights law 278
5.1 Introduction 278
5.2 Antecedents:the case of slavery 279
5.3 Protection of individuals during the inter-war period 282
(a) Minorities 282
(b) Inhabitants of mandated territories 287
(c) Refugees 291
(d) The International Labour Organisation 294
(e) Conclusions 295
5.4 International protection of human rights after 1945 296
(a) Human rights rhetoric during the Second World War 296
(b) Preparation for an international bill of rights 299
(c) The United Nations Charter:a promise postponed 301
(d) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 306
(e) From moral imperative to legal articulation:state obligations,individual rights and international enforcement in the European system 307
(f) Human rights and state obligations in the UN system 312
(ⅰ) Subject-specific conventions 313
(ⅱ) The International Covenants 315
(ⅲ) Declarations of specific rights 320
(ⅳ) Special procedures before the Human Rights Commission (now the Human Rights Council) 321
(g) Customary international human rights law:from soft to hard law? 322
(h) Jus cogens human rights norms 326
(i) The evolution of enforcement mechanisms:the regional systems 327
(j) Conclusions 327
5.5 Conclusions:the position of the individual in international human rights law 337
Part Ⅲ: Reassessing the Framework 341
6. Reflections on the structures of the international legal system 343
6.1 Introduction 343
6.2 Historical development of the position of the individual in the international legal system 343
(a) The nineteenth century international legal system 343
(b) The inter-war period 346
(c) The post-1945 international legal system 349
6.3 International legal personality as the measure of engagement:the case of the individual 353
(a) 'Subjects' versus 'objects' 353
(b) Locating individuals:rights,obligations and capacities 358
(c) Moving from the actor to the action?The notion of international law relationships 363
6.4 Reflections on structural transition in the international legal system:the case of the individual 365
(a) Relative openness and flexibility of the system 365
(b) Forces for structural change:solutions above theories 367
(c) States in the international legal system 369
Bibliography 373
Index 394