This book thoroughly discusses the concept of sovereign immunity in international law and how the problems normally associated with the said subject can be resolved in order to promote justice. In part one, the author shows through a careful analysis of the law that restrictive immunity does not have
vox populi
in developing countries and that it lacks
usus.
He also argues that forum law, i.e., the
lex fori
is a creature of sovereignty and between equals before the law, only what is understood and acknowledged as law among states must be applied in as much as the international legal system is horizontal.
Furthermore, the state never acts as a juridical or natural person and, therefore, in logical terms, its functions cannot be divided into
potere politico
and
persona civile
as a prelude to determine jurisdiction. The said Italian doctrine, therefore, is
ex-facie erroneous
,
and that a simple dichotomy between absolute immunity and restrictive immunity wholly predicated on the nature test alone would not be helpful in promoting justice. Hence the contextual approach, arbitration and comparative dominant theory are suggested as essential tools to supplement the UN Treaty on state immunity when it comes into force because some states are likely to stay out of the said treaty regime.
In part two, of the book, the author provides a comprehensive analysis of international criminal justice i.e., the prosecution of heads of state before international tribunals and the means or tools available to defend these leaders. To that end, it is apposite that a distinction between immunity
ratione personae
and immunity
ratione materiae
be made clear, whereby emphasis must be placed on their differences and legal consequences in regard to the verticality of international tribunals and foreign criminal jurisdiction of statese.g., the ICC and SCLC.
The author further argues forcefully that the law has not changed and that despite the reforming zeal
of some important states to change the law, in reality however, the law remains
almost intact wholly structured on the presumption of immunity subject to certain limited acknowledged exceptions duly supported by
opinio juris,
thus eclipsing the suggestion by some scholars, senior courts and international tribunals that the law be instead based on an acknowledged exception to a presumed jurisdiction. This is because international law is a decentralized public order system without a compulsory jurisdiction.
Bankas
The State Immunity Controversy in International Law jetzt bestellen!
Weitere Infos & Material
Part I
.- A General Perspective on the Historical Development of International Law.- The Origins of Absolute Immunity of States.- The Development of Sovereign Immunity.- The Privileges and Immunities of States.- Restrictive Immunity in U.S. and U.K. Courts.- Private Suits against African States in Foreign Courts.- African States and the Practice of State Immunity.- The ILC Report on Jurisdictional Immunities of States.- State Immunity and Certain Unresolved Problems.- State Immunity and Violation of International Law.- UN Draft Convention on State Immunity.- The Current Law of State Immunity.- New Horizons in the Law of State Immunity.- State Immunity and Vulture Funds.- Concluding Statement of Part I.-
Part II
.- State Immunity and International Criminal Justice.- Invoking State Immunity before the ICJ, International Tribunals and Foreign Courts.- The ICC and the Immunity Question.- The Normative Hierarchy Theory: Does
Jus Cogens
Conflict with State Immunity?.- Case Study: Can a Sitting President be Prosecuted by an International Tribunal?.- The Overlap of Immunity
Ratione Personae
and Immunity
Ratione Materiae
.
Dr Ernest K. Bankas is a legal scholar/Jurist Consult; Advocate on human rights and public international law.
- Education: BA Hons, LLB Hons, MA, LLM, LLM, SJD Law and PhD in law.
- PhD in public international law, Durham University 2000 UK.- SJD in Conflict of LAWS, SMU, 1990, Law school, Dallas Texas.- An expert in Public international law and Private international law.- Holds an LLM in international Criminal law from Washington University USA.- Awarded, Boutros Boutros Ghali, UN Scholarship to The Hague Academy of international law 1977.- Worked with Rad Associates Law office 1991- 4.- Visiting post-Doctoral Scholar, Durham University UK, 1995-2000.- Editorial member of the International law journal (Cornell University 1994 USA).- Testified as an expert before Federal District Court in Dallas Texas.- Published an article on conflict of laws in the International Lawyer.- Published two articles in the Durham student law review Known as Inter Alia.- Published a Book on Public international law. The state immunity Controversy in international law 2005.- Forthcoming second edition: The state immunity controversy in international law 2021.- Associated with Swansea University, Wales UK.