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1、professor henkin5s view of sovereigntylouis henkin,international law: politics and values 9-10(1995).sovereignty, a conception deriving from the relations between a prince and his/her subjects, is not a necessary or appropriate external attribute for the abstraction we call a state . for internation
2、al relations, surely for international law, it is a term largely unnecessary and better avoidedfor legal purposes at least, we might do well to relegate the term sovereignty to the shelf of history as a relic from an earlier era. to this end, it is necessary to analyze, ndecompose/ the concept; to i
3、dentify the elements that have been deemed to be inherent in, or to derive from, nsovereignty;11 in a system of states at the turn of the twenty-first century.1louis henkin,sibley lecture, march 1994 humanrights and sate "sovereignty二 25 ga. j. int!l & comp. l. 31 (1995/1996).elsewhere, i h
4、ave expressed the view that, as applied to states in the international system, nsovereigntyn is a mistake, indeed a mistake built upon mistakes, which has barnacled an unfortunate mythology. fn2 a political idea describing the locus of ultimate legitimate authority in national society, "soverei
5、gnty has been transmuted into an axiom of the inter-state system, which has become a barrier to international governance, to the growth of international law, and to the realization of human values i suggested the need to ndeconstructn the concept, strip it of its myth, identify its essentials, *32 r
6、etain only its valuable valuesthe assumptions of "sovereigntyamong the traditional assumptions sometimes deemed implicit in international “sovereignty,' one might identify the following:that the state system is committed exclusively to state values, principally to state autonomy and the imp
7、ermeability of state territory, and to the welfare of the state as a monolithic entity;that international law is based on the consent of states, and is made only by states and only for states;that the international system and international law do not (may not) address what goes on within a state; in
8、 particular, how a state treats its own inhabitants is no one else's business, not the business of the system, not the business of any other state;that a state may concern itself with what goes on inside another state only as that impinges on its own state interests(therefore, a state may presum
9、e to afford ndiplomatic protection" to its diplomats or its nationals, not to other human beings.)that international law cannot be nenforcedn: a state can only be persuaded, induced, to honor its international obligations and will do so only when it is in its national interest to do so;that a s
10、tate's sovereignty shields its constitutional system from international influencesinternational human rights reflectsor has effectedimportant derogations from those assumptions. in particular:that the international system, still very much a system of independent states, has moved beyond state va
11、lues towards human values fn3 *33 and towards commitment to human welfare broadly conceived;that an international law of human rights has penetrated the once-impermeable state entity and now addresses the condition of human rights within every state;that the international law of human rights now inc
12、ludes important norms to which some states have not consented;that the international system has developed institutions for enforcing human rights law against "sovereign" states and has sometimes encouraged states to "intervene” in other states in support of human rights;that internati
13、onal law has importantly influencedandbeen influenced bynationalconstitutions and constitutional systems.louis henkin, that “s" word: sovereignty,andglobalization,and human rights,et cetera, 68 fordham l. rev. 1 (october, 1999).i don't like the ns word.” its birth is illegitimate, and it ha
14、s not aged well. the meaning of "sovereignty" is confused and its uses are various, some of them unworthy, some even destructive of human values.i address the sovereignty of states. it is part of my thesis that the sovereignty of states in international relations is essentially a mistake,
15、an illegitimate offspring. sovereignty began as a domestic term in a domestic contex匸it referred to relations between rulers andthose they ruled, between the "sovereign" and his or her subjects. its application to modern statesa state is not a person, but an abstractionand its relation to
16、other abstractions, such as the governments which represent states, has inevitably brought distortion and confusion. that much has been agreed, and was agreed upon in the early part of the century, and it is what professors of international law and politics have long taught. but something happened t
17、o that ns word11 in the twentieth century i address what one might call ''transformative" developments.the first, perhaps the most important, came after two world wars, after the sacrifice of several human generations and millions and millions of human lives. after the defeat of hitler,
18、 sovereignty began to mean "let's leave each other aloneno war, no use of force.n that was the law that was established in the united nations charter and at nuremberg jfn8 war became illegal, fn9 then nuclear weapons made world war unthinkable, and world war was in fact kept "cold” for
19、 thirty years we may not appreciate how remarkable that was, that transformative development in the middle of the twentieth century: nsovereign statesn gave up their "sovereign” right to go to war.another development, less dramatic, also followed the end of the second world war. at mid-century5
20、 states had to learn to pursue "cooperation.” fn10 cooperation by "sovereign" states did not come easily, and it continues to be difficult. i blame the delusions and mythology of sovereignty for the failure of states to collaborate more extensively. sovereignty does not encourage coop
21、eration; it breeds hgoing it alone/we have had some cooperation, but it has been limited in the name of sovereignty. we pursued a quest for world order, but a limited world order. we created a united nations, but it is a limited united nations.fn 11 we have a world bank and an international monetary
22、 fund and other specialized agencies, and they are all limited by the concept of sovereignty they are limited, not only in achievement but even in aspiration, by a persistent addiction to this notion of sovereignty.the international human rights movement is a third transformatio n. until 1945, sover
23、eignty, political independence and territorial impermeability*4 meant that how a state treated its own inhabitants was not a subject of international concern. fn12 how a state treated its own inhabitants was nobody else's businessthat was hitler. the world stood by, and had nothing to say about
24、it. international law said nothing about it. what went on behind territorial frontiers was cloaked by an iron curtain of sovereignty.the international human rights movement, born during the second world war, has represented a significant erosion of state sovereignty and it took hitler and the holoca
25、ust to achieve that. since 1945, how a state treats its own citizens, how it behaves even in its own territory, has no longer been its own business; it has become a matter of international concern, of international politics, and of international law.fn13 and so, state sovereignty at the end of the t
26、wentieth centuryand at the beginning of the twenty-firstcan be summarized as: "sovereignty means heave us alone.h, sovereignty is: nwe will engage in a minimal amount of cooperation, if we as sovereign states consent.0 sovereignty is subject to some "creeping" international human righ
27、ts, to the extent sovereign nations consent. in general, i fear sovereignty as we have known it is alive and well.that would have been my conclusion if asked to speak five years ago. now, however, as we face a new century, a new millennium, one hears that ns word" again we hear it invoked, proc
28、laimed, protested, perhaps protested too much as if the concept is under siege. i have noted three contexts in which we hear the cry of sovereignty, cries of joy or of anguish, but surely of confusio nthe first is nglobalizationna new word, a new development, a new phenomenon, that has become almost
29、 a buzzword state socialism is gone, and state capitalism, too, is giving way to privatization. fn24 a global economy is largely replacing and overwhelming national and regional economies. pn25 companies created in one country areheadquartered *6 in another with branches and subsidiaries, or mines a
30、nd factories, in third or fourth or fifth or more countries. itn26 multinational companies are swallowing up national companies, and finding themselves subject to the confusion and inefficiency of competing sovereignties. fn27what is globalization doing, or what has it done, to that concept of sover
31、eignty, the oldest idea in international relations? giant companies have become largely independent of states, of the states that created them, of the states in which they operate. some of them are replacing, or at least jostling, the states themselves in the state system so we have the phenomenon o
32、f globalization and everybody thinks it is doing something to sovereignty (i think it is, too, although pm not sure exactly what).the ninternational market11 is a related concept. we read and hear about nthe market/ where is the market? where is it physically or geographically? under whose laws and
33、under whose control? who is sovereign in regard to the market, or perhaps is the market sovereign? there are other terms, or concepts, out there, some of which i don't understandcyberspacewhere is cyberspace? is it subject to state sovereignty? to the same state sovereignty? is cyberspace sovere
34、ign?and perhaps a different, earlier "globalization/ slowly recognized, still barely attended to, is nthe environment.n fn28 where is the environment? is it sovereign? is it subject to some state's sovereignty, or perhaps to the sovereignty of several states, or to the sovereignty of all st
35、ates?in theory, in very theoretical theory, every state can try to subject these global phenomena, or some pieces of them, to its sovereign jurisdiction. in theory, in theoretical theory at least, sovereign states can get together and agree to laws and create institutions. but no sovereign state, an
36、d not all state sovereignties together, seem to be sovereign enough to solve the problems that these developments have brought to our human society at the end of the twentieth century there is growing, though grudging, realization that world economic affairs, *7 world communications, and inevitably,
37、 therefore, world politics, are no longer cabined within the state system and suddenly, or perhaps slowly, the realization is sinking in that sovereignty has lost its nerve, and sovereign states have realized that they are losing their control, that the state system is losing control.in sum, soverei
38、gnty should not mean isolationism. it should not mean resistance to cooperation it should not mean indifference to, or forfeiture of responsibility for, what happens elsewhere. it should not mean refusal to assume obligations it should not mean failure to comply with obligations we have assumed. sov
39、ereign states, one has to remind governments, can adhere to human rights treaties, and they can do so without reservations. and they can cancel reservations they have entered.in sum, sovereignty should not mean isolationism it should not mean resistance to cooperation. it should not mean indifferenc
40、e to, or forfeiture of responsibility for, what happens elsewhere. it should not mean refusal to assume obligations it should not mean failure to comply with obligations we have assumed. sovereign states, one has to remind governments, can adhere to human rights treaties, and they can do so without
41、reservations. and they can cancel reservations they have entered sovereignty as a right to do as one pleases is part of the concept, but not sovereignty as anarchy, not sovereignty as resistance to cooperation. and not sovereignty as immunity the most common use of the word nsovereignty0 may be in s
42、overeign immunityimmunity from law, immunity from scrutiny, immunity from justice. general pinochet gets no votes from me.what shall we do about the ns word?n i have tipped my hand we need to address what has happened to traditional notions of sovereignty as a result of forces we have identified, and others, globalization, the market, and cyberspace but, to sum up, if the state system has lost control, single states still have jurisdictio
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