Institutions in International Law

Institutions in International Law

In national law, the main institutions are independent courts, representative parliaments, an accountable executive, the administration (including the police) and the legal profession. They all serve the civil society. John Locke, in his Two Treatises of Government, and Montesquieu , in The Spirit of the Laws, advocated for a separation of powers between the political, legislature and executive bodies.

Institutions in international law covers the place of International institutions within the international legal order, considering their structure, normative underpinnings, and activities. It focuses on international organisations (both inter-governmental and non-governmental organisations) and the role of civil society and national governments in both types of institution. International institutions reflect conflicting notions of fragmentation and unity in international law.

Principal topics covered by institutions in international law include:

  • Diplomacy
  • European Union
  • International Organizations
  • International Relations
  • League of Nations
  • United Nations
  • Relationship between international institutions and international law
  • Theory of fragmentation in international law and its relevance to international institutions
  • International institutions: legal issues they face International institutions: how they relate to each other
  • International institutions: key factors influencing them (from the perspective of law, policy, politics, Diplomacy, and management)
  • The complex role of international institutions in the development of international law and global governance
  • The specialised international institutions (often based in Geneva), including their history, trends in their mission, influence and importance, recent developments, and reform proposals
  • The theory surrounding fragmentation of international law, including the proliferation of institutions and dispute settlement tribunals and the proliferation of substantive laws
  • Inter-organisational cooperation, coordination and conflict in areas such as trade, human rights the Laws of war, and development;

International Institutional Law and International Organizations

The topic of International Institutional Law and International Organizations include:

  • Constituent Instruments of international organizations
  • Membership and Representation of international organizations
  • Legal Capacity of international organizations
  • Legal Powers of international organizations
  • Assessing the Legality of Decisions of international organizations
  • Responsibility of international organizations
  • Privileges of international organizations
  • Immunities of international organizations
  • The Law of the International Civil Service
  • International Administrative Tribunals

Resources:

References and Further Reading

Conclusion

Notes

See Also

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

Diplomacy, International Organizations, International institutions, Laws of war, League of Nations, Legal subjects, Montesquieu.


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