Human Rights, International Economic Law and Constitutional Justice: A Rejoinder

Similar documents
Taking Human Dignity, Poverty and Empowerment of Individuals More Seriously: Rejoinder to Alston*

Sources of law in the WTO

Human rights, constitutional justice and international economic adjudication: Legal methodology problems. LAW 2018/18 Department of Law

Democratic Legitimacy and the TTIP Agreement. Prof. Ernst Ulrich Petersmann EUI Florence

International dispute settlement and the position of individuals under EU and international law

How to Reconcile Health Law and Economic Law with Human Rights? Administration of Justice in Tobacco Control Disputes. LAW 2015/01 Department of Law

The Relationship of WTO Law and Regional Trade Agreements in Dispute Settlement. From Fragmentation to Coherence. Malebakeng Agnes Forere

Between member-driven WTO governance and constitutional justice : Judicial dilemmas in GATT/WTO dispute settlement

University of Minnesota Law School

The WTO and the Social Clause: Post-Singapore

De-Fragmentation of International Economic Law through Constitutional Interpretation and Adjudication with Due Respect for Reasonable Disagreement

Talking Disputes Philip Morris v. Uruguay

CONSTITUTIONS AND GLOBAL MARKETS: HOW TO DEFINE THE DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES OF THE WORLD TRADING SYSTEM? Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann *

EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE, FLORENCE DEPARTMENT OF LAW

The Application of other public international laws in WTO dispute settlement.

international law of contemporary media session 7: the law of the world trade organization

Provisional Record 5 Eighty-eighth Session, Geneva, 2000

The (Non)Use of Treaty Object and Purpose in IP Disputes in the WTO Henning Grosse Ruse - Khan

ITUC OBSERVATIONS TO THE ILO COMMITTEE OF EXPERTS ON CONVENTION 87 AND THE RIGHT TO STRIKE

Article XVI. Miscellaneous Provisions

Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property and Competition Law

Voluntary Initiatives and the World Trade Organisation

Chapter VI Identification of customary international law

T H E W O R L D J O U R N A L O N J U R I S T I C P O L I T Y WTO DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISM: AN EVOLUTION OF DISPUTE SETTLEMENT.

Article XX. Schedule of Specific Commitments

ARTICLE 29 Data Protection Working Party

LAW 2013/03 Department of Law. Multilevel Judicial Governance in European and International Economic Law. Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann

Trade, Law and Development

ARTICLE 17.6 OF THE WTO ANTI DUMPING AGREEMENT: A BURDEN FOR DOMESTIC PRODUCERS TO OBTAIN RELIEF ) By: Iman Prihandono

EUI Working Papers. Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann LAW 2008/01

In the World Trade Organization Panel proceedings RUSSIA MEASURES CONCERNING TRAFFIC IN TRANSIT (DS512)

Joint Report on the EU-Canada Scoping Exercise March 5, 2009

WTO PUBLIC FORUM OCTOBER 2007

Anti-dumping Agreements and Exhaustion of Local Remedies

General intellectual property

General Interpretative Note to Annex 1A

Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann

Official Journal of the European Communities C 165/23

INTERNATIONAL LAW COMMISSION Sixty-seventh session Geneva, 4 May 5 June and 6 July 7 August 2015 Check against delivery

LAW 2018/02 Department of Law. Trade and investment adjudication involving silk road projects : Legal methodology challenges. Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann

WTO and the Environment: Case Studies in WTO Law. Dr. Christina Voigt University of Oslo, Department of Public and International Law

Index of the session

Table of Contents. Preface Abbreviations... 13

Protection of Persons in the Event of Disasters. Statement of the Chairman of the Drafting Committee. 30 May 2014

The following text will:

Developing Countries in the Doha Round

Human Rights in African Labour Markets

The Importance of Transparency in WTO Dispute Settlement

Treaty Interpretation by the WTO Appellate Body

AGREEMENT BETWEEN JAPAN AND THE EUROPEAN UNION FOR AN ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP PREAMBLE

,QIRUPDWLRQQRWHWRWKH&RPPLVVLRQ IURP&RPPLVVLRQHUV/DP\DQG)LVFKOHU

Supplementary Rebuttal Submission by the European Communities

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

The Commission s trade policy term A critical assessment

Humanity as the A and Ω of Sovereignty: A Rejoinder to Emily Kidd White, Catherine E. Sweetser, Emma Dunlop and Amrita Kapur

Chapter 2 Treaty Interpretation as Opposed to Statutory, Constitutional and Contractual Interpretations

CANCUN SESSION OF THE PARLIAMENTARY CONFERENCE ON THE WTO Cancún (Mexico), 9 and 12 September 2003

Preparing For Structural Reform in the WTO

INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN WTO DISPUTE SETTLEMENT

CRNM BRIEF ON LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES IN THE EPA

International tribunals: legalization and constitutionalization implications for national constitutional structures

The International Law Relation Between TRIPS and Subsequent TRIPS-plus Free Trade Agreements Towards Safeguarding TRIPS Flexibilities?

BACKGROUND NOTE PROPOSAL TO PERMANENTLY EXCLUDE NON-VIOLATION AND SITUATION COMPLAINTS FROM THE WTO TRIPS AGREEMENT. 20 September

UNITED NATIONS E Economic and Social Council Distr. GENERAL E/CN.4/Sub.2/AC.5/2005/2 4 April 2005 Original: ENGLISH

Denmark and Italy Trade-related intellectual property rights, access to medicines and human rights

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION

AGREEMENT ON RULES OF ORIGIN

Draft provisions on Trade and Gender Equality in the context of the Modernisation of the EU-Chile Association Agreement. Article 1

Dispute Settlement under FTAs and the WTO: Conflict or Convergence? David A. Gantz

TRADE FACILITATION IN THE MULITILATERAL FRAMEWORK OF THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO)

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW: THE POLITICAL THEATRE DIMENSION

Compliance with International Trade Obligations. The Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa

Markus Böckenförde, Grüne Gentechnik und Welthandel Summary Chapter I:

Andrew Clapham* Abstract. ... The Role of the Individual in International Law

Comment to the Guidelines on Consent under Regulation 2016/679 by Article 29 Working Party

EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES MEASURES AFFECTING THE APPROVAL AND MARKETING OF BIOTECH PRODUCTS (WT/DS291/292/293)

Protection of Persons in the Event of Disasters

WTO ANALYTICAL INDEX TBT Agreement Article 2 (Jurisprudence)

10 common misunderstandings about the WTO

ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION

37: Review and Amendment

Subsequent agreements and subsequent practice in relation to the interpretation of treaties. Statement of the Chair of the Drafting Committee

Rules of Procedure ( Rules ) of the Unified Patent Court

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LouvainX online course [Louv2x] - prof. Olivier De Schutter

Multilateral Environmental Agreements versus World Trade Organization System: A Comprehensive Study

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. 3 P a g e

NOTE. 3. Annexed is the Chapter from the WTO Analytical Index, 3 rd edition (2012) providing information on the Agreement on Textiles and Clothing.

Judge Thomas Buergenthal Justice 2018: Charting the Course March 13, 2008 International Center for Ethics, Justice, and Public Life

7 September 2004 MLC/SB/am

U.S. Statement on Preamble/Political Declaration

Article XIX. Emergency Action on Imports of Particular Products

Kimberley N. Trapp* 1 The Inter-state Reading of Article The Use of Force against Terrorists: A Reply to Christian J. Tams

The World Trade Organization. Alireza Naghavi

HUMAN INTERNATIONAL LAW

CLOSING STATEMENT H.E. AMBASSADOR MINELIK ALEMU GETAHUN, CHAIRPERSON- RAPPORTEUR OF THE 2011 SOCIAL FORUM

EUROPEAN DATA PROTECTION SUPERVISOR

Article 1. Coverage and Application

Elimination of Discrimination against Women in Political and Public Life Addressing Domestic Violence against Women. Dubrovnik, October 2003

EDITORIAL: THE UN, THE EU AND JUS COGENS RAMSES A. WESSEL*

Transcription:

The European Journal of International Law Vol. 19 no. 5 EJIL 2008; all rights reserved... Human Rights, International Economic Law and Constitutional Justice: A Rejoinder Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann * All academics learn from discussion and criticism of their published views. Hence, I congratulated the EJIL editors, Alston in 2002 and Weiler in 2008, when they invited a response to my articles in EJIL. Following the insulting EJIL comments by Alston in 2002, this is the second time in my 37 years of academic teaching that a commentator has imputed to me intoxicating views which I never expressed. Six years after the confabulations by Alston and Howse, 1 Howse remains committed to misrepresenting rather than discussing my legal arguments. Clarifying, in fewer than 2,500 words, the reasons for this Alice in Wonderland non-discussion would have been more enlightening if my Australian and Canadian commentators had respected correct academic citation before publicly putting forth their aggressive legal phantasms. Here I want to suggest ways in which such an exchange may be more constructive. 1 First Proposal: Argue Honestly without Insulting It is becoming a sad tradition that EJIL rejoinders have to begin by rejecting insults like horribile dictu Petersmann suggests that the real sin of the Nazis was abuses in the over-regulation of the marketplace ; the right to strike is an assault on companies ability to exercise their market freedoms ; and Petersmann s Lochnerian vision is inconsistent with positive international law of human rights. I have never expressed such abhorrent views. My sentence referring to the Nazi dictatorship from 1933 to 1945 and to its abominable abuses of regulatory powers in the economic area * Professor of International and European Law and Head of the Law Department at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy. Previously Professor at the University of Geneva and its Graduate Institute of International Studies. 1 Petersmann, Taking Human Dignity, Poverty and Empowerment of Individuals More Seriously: Rejoinder to Alston, 13 EJIL (2002) 845. EJIL (2008), Vol. 19 No. 5, 955 960 doi: 10.1093/ejil/chn061

956 EJIL 19 (2008), 955 960 justifies no insinuation that I neglect the German holocaust as the worst crime in human history. Nor does my reference to repeated ECJ findings i.e., that the exercise of the right to strike must respect, and be reconciled with, the market freedoms of EC law justify Howse s insinuation that I disregard the human right to strike. Nor have I ever endorsed the infamous Lochner judgment of the US Supreme Court whose one-sided reasoning is the opposite of the judicial balancing of rules and principles by all European courts with due regard to comprehensive human rights guarantees in Europe, which my article presents as diverse models for constitutional justice and for judicial interpretations of economic law. 2 Second Proposal: Don t Write Comments if your Prejudices Prevent you from Commenting Fairly My article s core argument that multilevel judicial Solange dialogues among national and European courts, their respect for constitutional pluralism, and their diverse constitutional interpretations of intergovernmental economic rules in the light of human rights better reflect constitutional justice, and the customary rules of treaty interpretation, than the one-sided focus by WTO and NAFTA panels on rights and obligations of governments, without judicial regard to the human rights obligations of all UN member states is diametrically opposite to the disregard for human rights à la Lochner. Discrediting judicial review by the ECJ, EFTA, ECtHR, and national courts in Europe, and of my proposals for a constitutional theory of international adjudication, as Lochnerism distorts reality completely. For these European constitutional approaches rightly avoid one-sided judicial focus on the protection of property rights by interpreting economic law with due regard for all human rights and principle-oriented judicial balancing. The diverse traditions of multilevel European constitutionalism described in my article offer citizen-oriented international law paradigms which challenge Lochnerism in investor state arbitration as well as the American reluctance: to ratify worldwide and regional human rights conventions (e.g., on economic, social, and cultural rights, children rights, discrimination against women, labour rights); to submit to the compulsory jurisdiction of international courts (e.g., the PCIJ, ICJ, ICC, ITLOS, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights); to acknowledge more generally the democratic legitimacy of judicial rule-making (e.g., prohibiting racial discrimination inside the US); to protect social justice more effectively (e.g., by social health insurance legislation, judicial protection of international children and labour rights); to assume international leadership for international competition, market, environmental regulation, and poverty reduction; or to follow the European example of multilevel judicial protection of the rule of international law (including EC law as a more reasonable international law of the future ).

Human Rights, International Economic Law and Constitutional Justice: A Rejoinder 957 Howse neither responds to my criticism of North American constitutional and judicial nationalism and under-regulated capitalism à la Wall Street, nor does his anti-lochnerism explain his opposition to multilevel European constitutionalism and to the European social market economy alternative to North American capitalism. Nor does he offer alternatives for providing global public goods more effectively. Si tacuisses sapientior paruisses. 3 Third Proposal: Treat your Opponents Reasonably, without Unnecessary Polemics Reasonableness differs from rationality by treating other people with respect. Of course, Howse is right that mere mention of self-realization, human dignity and the like cannot substitute for justification of particular view(s) of self-realization or human dignity. These concepts had been explained in my EJIL contribution until the text was shortened at the request of the editors. Yet why does Howse avoid commenting on my other publications on these concepts (e.g. defining human dignity in the sense of respect for individual moral and reasonable autonomy and responsibility) 2 and on the European tradition of basing European constitutional law on liberty (cf. Article 6 EU) and respect for human dignity (cf. Article 1 EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, Article 1 German Basic Law). My 2002 EJIL rejoinder had already identified my individualist conception of human dignity (emphasizing individual self-determination of whether professional and other economic struggles for survival are valued more or less than non-economic activities) as the main distinction from Alston s and Howse s communitarian conceptions. Obviously, the US Supreme Court s double standard in favour of strict judicial scrutiny of substantive due process for civil and political freedoms but only procedural due process protection of economic and social rights, or justification of border discrimination among Canadian provinces as social justice reflects democratic traditions different from European constitutionalism. Rather than continuing Quixotic attacks against longstanding European constitutional traditions which have been uniquely successful in limiting border discrimination against foreigners and in protecting a social market economy and democratic peace among more than 500 million European citizens, why does Howse not respect reasonable disagreement and constitutional pluralism? 4 Fourth Proposal: Discuss Multilevel Constitutionalism in a Contextual and Comparative Perspective Howse s erroneous identification of substantive due process in European judicial review of economic regulation as Lochner-style constitutional jurisprudence reflects 2 Petersmann, Human Rights, Markets and Economic Welfare: Constitutional Functions of the Emerging UN Human Rights Constitution, in F. Abbot, C. Breining-Kaufmann, and T. Cottier (eds), International Trade and Human Rights (2006), at 29.

958 EJIL 19 (2008), 955 960 the regrettable neglect by many North American international lawyers of comparative constitutional law. 3 As Howse draws from Petersmann s article a confusing, inconsistent, and obscure picture of the international law framework applicable to the use of non-wto international law in the interpretation of the WTO Agreements, let me recall my constitutional interpretations of the WTO requirement of clarifying the existing provisions of those agreements in accordance with customary rules of interpretation of public international law (Article 3.2 DSU). 4 Howse s criticism of my statement that WTO law does not include an explicit authorization (similar to Article 288 UNCLOS) to decide disputes not only on the basis of WTO law but also with due regard to other relevant rules of international law overlooks the well-known distinction between applicable law in the relevant jurisdiction and contextual interpretation, taking into account other relevant rules of international law applicable in the relations between the parties (Article 31.3 VCLT). Neither Howse nor the ILC Fragmentation Report discusses my argument that customary law e.g., the requirement that disputes concerning treaties should be settled in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, including universal respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all (Preamble VCLT) justifies a constitutional approach to treaty interpretation which may be more important for integrating fragmented treaty regimes through multilevel judicial clarification of principles of justice than the formalist conflict rules of the VCLT (like lex specialis, lex posterior, lex superior ) and (con)textual interpretation pursuant to Article 31 VCLT focusing on intergovernmental rights and obligations. A comparative, constitutional approach also refutes Howse s claim that Petersmann s presentation of the relationship of human rights to private economic activity [is] misrepresenting the significance of taking into account human rights law in the WTO. I have argued long since, many years before Howse, that the customary methods of international treaty interpretation (as codified in the VCLT) may justify interpreting inter-governmental rights and obligations under UN, GATT, and WTO rules, like those under EC law, as protecting rights and obligations of citizens under human rights law, constitutional rules, and legislation. 5 Contrary to Howse s claims that Petersmann does not mention even a hypothetical situation of overlapping jurisdictions of WTO dispute settlement bodies and human rights courts, I also explained why human rights arguments in European court cases (e.g., about environmental demonstrators blocking freedom of trade, police orders restricting imported laser games so as to protect human dignity) could be simultaneously raised in WTO dispute settlement proceedings against the same EC Member States. My book reflecting on my years of practical experiences as 3 Cf. M. Hilf and E.-U. Petersmann (eds), National Constitutions and International Economic Law (1993). 4 Petersmann, WTO Dispute Settlement Practice 1995 2005: Lessons from the Past and Future Challenges, in Y. Taniguchi, A. Yanovich, and J. Bohanes (eds), The WTO in the Twenty-First Century: Dispute Settlement, Negotiations and Regionalism in Asia (2006), at 38. 5 Cf. E.-U. Petersmann, Constitutional Functions and Constitutional Problems of International Economic Law (1991); idem, How to Reform the UN System? Constitutionalism, International Law and International Organizations, 10 Leiden J Int l L (1997) 421.

Human Rights, International Economic Law and Constitutional Justice: A Rejoinder 959 legal advisor in GATT/WTO dispute settlement panels, as well as in the GATT Negotiating Groups that elaborated the WTO dispute settlement system and WTO institutions, concluded that principles of justice and human rights are relevant contexts for clarifying the systemic dimensions of what WTO law calls the basic principles and objectives underlying this multilateral trading system (Preamble to the WTO Agreement) and its dispute settlement system of the WTO (Article 3 DSU). 6 For example, in contrast to state-centred interpretations by American lawyers of Article 23 DSU as prohibiting domestic courts from determining violations of WTO rules of their own governments, 7 I advocated citizen-oriented interpretations of WTO commitments to providing security and predictability to the multilateral trading system (Article 3 DSU). 5 Fifth Proposal: Acknowledge the Constitutional Dimensions of Global Governance Problems Like the American leadership in designing global governance institutions following World Wars I and II, the world needs American leadership for more effective legal protection of global public goods, including the international rule of law and a mutually beneficial world trading system. In view of the selfish interests of trade diplomats in limiting their legal and judicial accountability vis-à-vis domestic citizens for welfare-reducing violations of WTO law, I appreciate Howse s support that the betrayal of the rule of law ideal at the WTO reflects intergovernmental discourse failures which have to be challenged by civil society. In my role as chairman of the International Trade Law Committee of the International Law Association, which represents law associations and lawyers from all over the world, I contributed not only to worldwide calls for more consistent interpretation and judicial protection by national and international courts of the rule of law in international trade; 8 the ILA also endorsed my proposal that WTO members and bodies are legally required to interpret and apply WTO rules in conformity with the human rights obligations of WTO members under international law. 9 Interpreting Art icle 23 DSU as preventing domestic courts from holding their own governments judicially accountable for violations of WTO law runs counter to the citizen s interest in the rule of law. The human right to access to justice and the WTO guarantees of individual access to courts offer (con)textual arguments that Article 23 establishes an exclusive jurisdiction only for intergovernmental disputes; the multilevel dispute settlement system of the WTO should provide security and predictability to the multilateral trading system (Article 3 DSU) also for citizens engaged in, and benefiting from, international trade. Like most North American supporters of global administrative law based on constitutional nationalism, Howse remains sceptical of European proposals that 6 Cf. E.-U. Petersmann, The GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement System (1997). 7 Cf. R. Bhala and K. Kennedy, World Trade Law (1998), at 43. 8 ILA Resolution 2/2000 on The Rule of Law in International Trade, ILA Report 2000, at 18. 9 ILA Resolution 5/2008 on Human Rights and International Trade Law, ILA Report 2008.

960 EJIL 19 (2008), 955 960 multilevel governance for the collective supply of international public goods requires multilevel constitutionalism. 10 Yet, Hobbesian principal agent theories describing diplomats as the real masters of international organizations need to be challenged by cosmopolitan constituencies (P. Lamy) and constitutional conceptions of citizens as democratic owners of international governance institutions. Why does Howse criticize the more effective and more constitutionally restrained dispute settlement procedures in European courts and their respect for reasonable disagreement and competing conceptions of constitutional justice rather than the ineffectiveness of NAFTA dispute settlement procedures (e.g., the repeated US non-compliance with Chapter 19 and 20 panel findings) and their frequently one-sided focus on investor rights (e.g., under Chapter 11 arbitration)? 6 Sixth Proposal: Probe beyond the Surface by Scrutinizing the Foundations Howse s conclusion a human rights suit of clothes just doesn t hang properly on an old GATT hand does not probe beyond the surface. WTO and EC diplomats have contributed no less to poverty reduction and international rule of law (as a precondition for democratic self-governance in our globally integrated world) than UN human rights diplomats discrediting the WTO as a veritable nightmare for developing countries and women. 11 Markets as citizen-driven dialogues about values (e.g., of goods and services) and information mechanisms (e.g., on supply and demand) and the regulation of market failures are indispensable complements of human rights. As a long-standing advocate of more market regulation (e.g., by means of WTO competition and environmental rules), 12 I also supported the UNHCHR s recommendations for strengthening the human rights dimensions of WTO agreements so as to enfranchise citizens in their worldwide division of labour. 13 Rather than being blinded by anti-government bias (as Howse suggests), I have been one of the most outspoken critics of the North American lack of any coherent theory for the collective supply of global public goods. Does Howse believe that the weak institutions, hegemonic pressures, protectionist lobbying, and lack of international human rights guarantees in NAFTA which President Reagan presented as North America s economic constitution offer a better model than the EC, EEA, and WTO? Judging WTO practitioners and European economic courts by looking at the clothes of people is as superficial as Howse s comment on my EJIL contribution. 10 Cf. C. Joerges and E.-U. Petersmann (eds), Constitutionalism, Multilevel Trade Governance and Social Regulation (2006). 11 Globalization and its Impact on the Full Enjoyment of Human Rights, E/CN.4/Sub.2/2000/12, at para. 15. 12 Cf. E.-U. Petersmann, International and European Trade and Environmental Law after the Uruguay Round (1995); idem, Need for Integrating Trade and Competition Rules in the WTO World Trade and Legal System (1996). 13 Petersmann, The Human Rights Approach Advocated by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and by the ILO: Is it Relevant for WTO Law and Policy?, (2004) J Int l Econ L 605.