The Contractual Nature of the Optional Clause
By (Author) Gunnar Trber
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
16th July 2015
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
341
Hardback
410
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
765g
The International Law Commissions Guiding Principles for Unilateral Declarations and its Guide to Practice on Reservations to Treaties are among the recent developments in international law. These developments support a new assessment on how optional clauses (e.g. Art 62(1) of the American Convention on Human Rights) and especially the Optional Clause (Art 36(2) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ)) can be characterised and treated. The question is in how far optional clauses and the respective declarations can be considered a multilateral treaty or a bundle of unilateral declarations and to what extent one of the corresponding regimes applies. Based on inter alia all the jurisprudence of the Permanent Court of International Justice and the ICJ on the Optional Clause, but also on the relevant jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights or the General Comments of the United Nations Human Rights Committee, this book provides a comprehensive assessment of all legal issues regarding the Optional Clause and also optional clauses in general. The chapters of the book deal with the making of Optional Clause declarations, the interpretation of such declarations, reservations made to the declarations as well as the withdrawal or amendment of declarations. The book will appeal to academics interested in international treaty law and practitioners working with optional clauses and relating declarations.
Gunnar Trber is Legal Researcher at the University of Mnster.