Jus Cogens: International Law and Social Contract
di Thomas Weatherall (Autore
One of the most complex doctrines in contemporary
international law, jus cogens is the immediate product of the socialization of
the international community following the Second World War. However, the
doctrine resonates in a centuries-old legal tradition which constrains the
dynamics of voluntarism that characterize conventional international law. To
reconcile this modern iteration of individual-oriented public order norms with
the traditionally state-based form of international law, Thomas Weatherall
applies the idea of a social contract to structure the analysis of jus cogens
into four areas: authority, sources, content and enforcement. The legal and political
implications of this analysis give form to jus cogens as the product of
interrelation across an individual-oriented normative framework, a state-based
legal order, and values common to the international community as a whole.