UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository)
The internationalised rule of law
Nollkaemper, P.A.
Published in:
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law
DOI:
10.1017/S1876404509000748
Link to publication
Citation for published version (APA):
Nollkaemper, P. A. (2009). The internationalised rule of law. Hague Journal on the Rule of Law, 1(1), 74-78.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1876404509000748
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Download date: 16 Jun 2020
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André N ollk aemper
H JRL 1 (2009)
The Internationalized Rule of Law
André Nollkaemper*
In Resolution 62/70 of 8 January 2008, the UN General Assembly speaks about
the rule of law at the international level and the rule of law at the national level.
While these two phrases have framed the practical and scholarly debate on the rule
of the law over the past years, this bifurcation hampers our understanding of, as
well as effective policy formulation for, the rule of law problems that unfold in the
21st century. The rule of law increasingly is implicated at the interaction and interface between international and national law. We do not only speak about the rule
of law at international level and the rule of law at domestic level. We also, and increasingly, have to speak of an internationalized rule of law. This is the rule of law
as it applies to the overlapping sphere of domestic and international law.
In Resolution 62/70 of 8 January 2008, the UN General Assembly speaks about
the rule of law at the international level and the rule of law at the national level.
These terms have framed the practical and scholarly debate on the rule of the law
over the past years.
There may be several explanations for this dichotomy between the rule of law
at the international level and the rule of law at the domestic level. One simple
explanation is that domestic rule of law problems often have no international
dimension. An example might be a case of a corrupt local official who is bribed
and grants a building permit to a corporation in violation of planning law. Conversely, international rule of law problems may be far removed from domestic
law. An example is the invasion by the coalition led by the United States and the
United Kingdom in Iraq, in violation of the UN Charter, without any international remedy being available.
A more fundamental reason for the dichotomy between the rule of law at the
national and at the international level are the obvious structural differences between the international and the national legal orders. The most notable of these is
the fact that whereas at the domestic level the rule of law primarily (though not
exclusively) involves protection against the public power of the state, there is in
the international legal order no equivalent to such centralized public power. This
* Professor of International Law and Director of the Amsterdam Center for International Law,
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
H ague Journal on the Rule of L aw, 1: 74–78, 2009
© 2009 T.M.C .A SSE R PRE SS and Contributors
doi:10.1017/S1876404509000748
The Internationalized Rule of L aw
75
structural difference has several consequences for the nature of the rule of law at
the domestic and the international level. One such consequence is the absence of
compulsory international courts of general jurisdiction. Another is that the rule
of law at the international level is primarily concerned with the ‘horizontal’ struggle
between states for power. This may explain why many states in their submissions
to the General Assembly discussion on the rule of law referred to such classic
international law issues as non-intervention and the use of force – issues that are
quite far removed from the rule of law discourse as it plays out within a state. The
consequence is that, while the exact contents of the rule of law at domestic law
and at international law remains elusive, the contents and operation of the rule of
law at domestic and at international level is not identical.
While both the practical and the more structural explanations to some extent
account for the continued dichotomy between the rule of law at the international
level and the rule of law at the domestic level, the dichotomy fails to capture much
of the rule of the law problems as they unfold in the 21st century.
The increasing connections between international law and domestic law undermine the viability of maintaining a strict dichotomy between the rule of law at
international level and the rule of law at domestic level. Indeed, in those areas
where international law and domestic law connect or even overlap, it is no longer
helpful to distinguish sharply between the two levels vis-à-vis the rule of law. This
development has multiple dimensions. Let me consider three of them.
First, international law influences and often even determines the domestic rule
of law. International law is increasingly of a regulatory nature, governing directly
the legal rights and obligations of private persons who are located in domestic
legal orders. International law, particularly international human rights law, imposes
such fundamental limitations on the power of government that in fact it has become hard to think of rule of law problems in the relationship between a state
and its citizens that do not have some connection to international law. In this
respect, international (human rights) law strengthens and supports the domestic
rule of law, for instance in protecting the autonomy of domestic courts vis-à-vis
the political branches, and in protecting citizens against retrospective laws.
A second dimension is that the application of international law, surely one of
the requirements of the rule of law at international level, depends on the rule of
law at the domestic level. In virtually all fields of international law, compliance
with international law is not possible without a meaningful connection to the domestic arena. That is obvious for all those areas in which international law substantively deals with the same issues as domestic law (fundamental rights, the
environment, criminal law, etc.) and domestic laws must reflect international law.
The point is true more generally, however. The basic rules of international law –
that a state shall not go to war against another state and, if it does, shall not kill
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innocent civilians – are mostly thought of as interstate affairs. But such rules too
are powerless if there is no connection between the international norm and domestic law. The full effect of international rights and obligations requires and
presupposes a domestic rule of law. One cannot really conceive of a rule of law at
the international level in the absence of a domestic rule of law in a large number
of states.
A third dimension is that domestic institutions can fill rule of law gaps at the
international level. As international law pervades the domestic legal order more
deeply, it seems a sound premise that international law should conform to rule of
law requirements that we tend to pose for domestic law. Indeed, in those areas
where international law and domestic law intersect, it is not always helpful to distinguish sharply between the rule of law at international level and the rule of law
at domestic level. Consider the (thus far failed) attempts of victims of the Srebrenica
massacre to hold the United Nations responsible in Dutch courts. These courts
operate under domestic law and primarily apply domestic law. Yet, these proceedings are potentially significant for closing a rule of law gap that results from the
absence of any meaningful recourse against the United Nations at international
level.
Domestic institutions, notably courts, can play a role in upholding the rule of
law at international level by scrutinizing whether international acts (in particular
acts of international organizations) are compatible with fundamental rights. Determining whether or not international acts of law-making conform to fundamental rights ideally would be a task of international courts. But in the absence of
such courts with adequate jurisdiction, national courts can provide the missing
link by assessing international acts in the light of fundamental rights. Rather than
domestic filters being viewed as an unwarranted barrier to the full effect of international law, domestic institutions may be complementary to the ambitions of
international law itself. The Kadi judgment of the European Court of Justice of
September 2008 is a fitting example.
In sum, the rule of law is increasingly defined by the interaction and interface
between international and national law. There is thus a third domain between the
two levels with which the General Assembly is concerned. We do not only speak
about the rule of law at the international level and the rule of law at domestic
level. We also increasingly have to speak of an internationalized rule of law. This is
the rule of law as it applies to the overlapping sphere of domestic and international law. The internationalized rule of law is characterized by the fact that international law and international institutions can fill rule of law gaps at the domestic
law and vice versa, gaps brought about by the very growth of that overlap.
As is the case for the rule of law at a purely domestic level and the rule of law
at international level, the exact contents of this internationalized version of the
The Internationalized Rule of L aw
77
rule of law remains difficult to identify. But on some elements there will be little
debate. In essence, the rule of law means literally what it says: persons and institutions should be ruled by the law – as a norm and in actual practice. The rule of law
requires that they abide by positive laws in force. This definition can be applied to
the domestic level as well as to the international level and is certainly the key to the
rule of law as it applies to overlapping spheres of international and domestic law.
A slightly more expanded definition, still neutral enough to be applicable both at
the international and the national level, would say that the rule of law means absence of the arbitrary use of power and the non-retrospective application of laws.
Given the customary nature of a large number of human rights, we even can
accept a thicker definition of the rule of law that applies domestically, internationally, and thus also to the internationalized rule of law.
The independent judiciary is a key element of the internationalized rule of law.
Indeed, this seems the phenomenon that distinguishes the rule of law at the international level from the internationalized rule of law. It has been contested whether
independent courts are a necessary element of the rule of law at the international
level. But when international law overlaps with domestic law, the absence of independent court that can review international law-based claims is not acceptable.
Domestic courts may fulfill that role. The relatively strong position of domestic
courts is not likely to be a temporary deficiency of international law. Though the
number and authority of international tribunals have increased, states will continue to be reluctant to subject large parts of their public powers to international
judicial review. Domestic judicial powers may be regarded by states as an acceptable alternative to supranational judicial institutions, because states may find that
such institutions unduly restrict their sovereignty. Moreover, domestic courts, for
all their limitations and problems, have more experience and more power to control the exercise of authority by ‘their’ government than remote, often somewhat
teeth less international courts and tribunals.
It is true that the role of domestic institutions, and in particular courts, in the
protection of an internationalized rule of law is limited across the world. There
are many countries with a weak rule of law where one cannot possibly expect
courts to solve rule of law gaps at the international level. In states where a relatively stable rule of law exists, courts may fulfill that function, but in such states
the political question doctrine, the requirement that treaties are to be self-executing before they can be applied by courts, and a variety of other factors limit the
effective power of domestic courts in upholding the key elements of the rule of
law – whether at national, at international level or both. However, the rule of law
was never conceived of as an accurate description of reality, but rather and perhaps primarily as an ambition.
It is doubtful whether the emergence of an internationalized rule of law has
been appropriately reflected in the wide variety of international policies that seek
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to strengthen the rule of law. The debate in the United Nations should refocus to
include also the rule of law at the juncture of the national and international level
– on the internationalized rule of law rather than (only) on the rule of law at each
of the two levels. The myriad rule of law programs that have been developed in
the past decades in many states across the world likewise should adjust to the
internationalized rule of law, and recognize the potential of a legal order that is
open to international law for strengthening the rule of law. This has been done to
some extent as a part of efforts to reconstruct the rule of law in Kosovo and
other former Eastern-European states, but it does not appear to be a systematic
point of attention in such programs.
The rule of law remains as much a problem and an ambition as it has been in
the past centuries. But the parameters and signposts have changed. Focal points
of rule of law development should include the power of international law to help
establish and reform domestic judiciaries where these are deficient, but also the
power of domestic courts to supply judicial review missing at international level
and safeguarding internationally protected rights. The rule of law at the national
and international levels is only part of the problem and part of the ambition. It is
the internationalized rule of law that should have our attention.