The expression
international disputes covers not only disputes between states
as such, but also other cases that have come within the ambit of international
regulation, being certain categories of disputes between states on the one hand,
and individuals, bodies corporate, and non-state entities on the other.
The
range of dispute is from minor differences scarcely causing a ripple on the
international surface to the other extreme of situations of prolonged friction
and tension between countries, attaining such a pitch as to menace peace and
security.
To settle international disputes as early as possible, and in a manner
fair and just to the parties involved, has been a long standing aim of
international law, and the rules and procedure in this connection are partly a
matter of custom or practice, and partly due to a number of important law-making
conventions such as the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 for the Pacific
Settlement of International Disputes and the United Nations Charter drawn up at
San Francisco in 1945. One of the principal objects of the latter Charter in
setting up the United Nations Organisation was indeed to facilitate the peaceful
settlement of differences between states. This also had been the purpose of the
League of Nations during the period of its activities between two world wars.
Broadly speaking, the methods of settling international disputes fall into two
categories:
- Peaceful means of settlement, that is, where the parties are agreeable
to finding an amicable solution.
- Forcible or coercive means of settlement, that is, where a solution is
found and imposed by force.
Peaceful Or Amicable Means Of Settlement
The peaceful or amicable methods of settling international disputes are
divisible into the following:
- Arbitration.
- Judicial settlement.
- Negotiation, good offices, mediation, conciliation, or inquiry.
- Settlement under the auspices of the United Nations Organization.
This classification does not mean that these processes remain in rigidly
separate compartments, each appropriate for resolving one particular class of
dispute. The position is otherwise in practice.
For example, the flexible
machinery established by the Convention of 18 March 1965 for the Settlement of
Investment Disputes between States and the Nationals of Other States consists of
an International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), at
Washington, with facilities for the arbitration and conciliation of investment
disputes, and provision for Panels of Arbitrators and Conciliators.
The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law adopted on 28 April
1976 a set of arbitration rules which allow also for conciliation of disputes
(the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules). Similarly the Permanent Court of Arbitration,
established under the Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of
International Disputes, 1907, provides for good offices and mediation, and for
international commissions of inquiry, as well as for arbitration.
(a) Arbitration:
Ordinarily arbitration denotes exactly the same procedure as in municipal
law, namely the reference of a dispute to certain persons called arbitrators,
freely chosen by the parties, who make an award without being bound to pay
strict regard to legal considerations. Experience of international practice has
shown, however, that many disputes involving purely legal issues are referred to
arbitrators for settlement on a legal basis.
Moreover, in the various treaties by which it has been agreed that disputes
should be submitted to arbitration, frequently in addition to being directed to
make their award according to justice or equity or ex aequo et bono, arbitral tribunals have been
specially instructed to apply international law. A common formula in the
nineteenth century was the direction to give a decision 'in accordance with the
principles of international law and the practice and jurisprudence of similar
tribunals of the highest authority'.
Arbitration is an institution of great
antiquity, but its recent modern history is recognised as dating from the Jay
Treaty of 1794 between the United States and Great Britain, providing for the
establishment of three joint mixed commissions to settle certain differences
which could not otherwise be disposed of in the course of the negotiation of the
Treaty. Although these commissions were not strictly speaking organs of third
party adjudication, two of the three performed successfully, and the result was
to stimulate a fresh interest in the process of arbitration which had fallen
into desuetude for about two centuries. A further impetus to arbitration was
given by the Alabama Claims Award of 1872 between the United States and Great
Britain.
According to Judge Manley O. Hudson:
'The success of the Alabama Claims
Arbitration stimulated a remarkable activity in the field of international
arbitration. In the three decades following 1872, arbitral tribunals functioned
with considerable success in almost a hundred cases; Great Britain took part in
some thirty arbitrations, and the United States in twenty; European States were
parties in some sixty, and Latin American States in about fifty cases.' Clauses
providing for the submission of disputes to arbitration were also frequently
inserted in treaties, particularly
law-making conventions, and to quote
Judge Hudson again,
arbitration thus became the handmaiden of international
legislation in as much as disputes concerning the interpretation or application
of the provisions of conventions could be submitted to it for solution.
Also a
number of arbitration treaties for the settlement of defined classes of disputes
between the states parties were concluded. A most important step was taken in
1899 when the Hague Conference not only codified the law as to arbitration but
also laid the foundations of the Permanent Court of Arbitration. The Hague
Conference of 1907 completed the work of the 1899 Conference. The Permanent
Court of Arbitration is an institution of a peculiar character.
It is neither 'permanent' nor is it a Court. The members of the 'Court' are appointed by
states which are parties to one or both of the conventions adopted by the Hague
Conferences. Each state may appoint four persons with qualifications in
international law, and all the persons so appointed constitute a panel of
competent lawyers from whom arbitrators are appointed as the need arises. Thus
the members of the Permanent Court of Arbitration never meet as a tribunal: 'Their sole function is to be available for service as members of tribunals
which may be created when they are invited to undertake such service.'
When a
dispute arises which two states desire to submit to arbitration by the Permanent
Court of Arbitration, the following procedure applies:
Each state appoints two arbitrators, of whom one only may be its national or
chosen from among the persons nominated by it as members of the Court panel.
These arbitrators then choose an umpire who is the presiding member of the
arbitral tribunal.
The award is given by majority vote. Each tribunal so created
will act pursuant to a special compromise or arbitration agreement, specifying
the subject of the dispute and the time allowed for appointing the members of
the tribunal, and defining the tribunal's jurisdiction, the procedure to be
followed, and the rules of law and the principles according to which its
decision is to be given. The Permanent Court of Arbitration itself has no
specific jurisdiction as such.
Approximately 20 arbitral tribunals have been
appointed under this system since its foundation, and several important awards
have been given, including those in the Pious Fund Case of 1902 between the
United States and Mexico, the Muscat Dhows Case of 1905 between Great Britain
and France, the North Atlantic Coast Fisheries Case of 1910 between the United
States and Great Britain, and the Savarkar Case of 1911 between Great Britain
and France. Since 1932 resort to the Permanent Court of Arbitration has been
infrequent, but the Bureau of the Court has been active in facilitating ad hoc
arbitrations outside the formal framework of the Hague Convention.
Its
facilities have been used, for example, by the Iran-United States Claims
Tribunal, set up in 1981. It should be noted that the national groups of members
appointed under the Convention also function as the nominating bodies for
periodic elections of judges to the International Court of Justice.
Notwithstanding it's obvious defects, as Judge Hudson says it was hardly more
than 'a method and a procedure, the Permanent Court of Arbitration was a
relative success, and in the early years of this century influenced a more
frequent recourse to arbitration as a method of settling international disputes,
while it may be said to have moulded the modern law and practice of arbitration.
This was reflected, too, in the great number of arbitration treaties, both
multilateral and bilateral, and of special ad hoc submission agreements,
concluded before and after the First World War.
Steps have been taken to revitalise the work of the Permanent Court, especially by making its facilities
more attractive to litigants through the adoption in 1993 of revised Optional
Rules for Arbitrating Disputes between Two Parties of Which Only One is a State.
Following the First World War, several important arbitral tribunals operated.
Among these may be mentioned the several Mexican Claims Commissions which
adjudicated the claims of six different states against Mexico on behalf of their
subjects, and the Mixed Arbitral Tribunals set up in Europe to deal with various
claims arising out of the territorial redistribution effected by the Treaty of
Versailles 1919.
Arbitration is essentially a consensual procedure. States
cannot be compelled to arbitrate unless they agree to do so, either generally
and in advance, or ad hoc in regard to a specific dispute. Their consent even
governs the nature of the tribunal established. The structure of arbitral
tribunals has accordingly in practice revealed anomalies. Sometimes a single
arbitrator has adjudicated a dispute, at other times a joint commission of
members appointed by the states in dispute, and very frequently a mixed
commission has been created, composed of nominees of the respective states in
dispute and of an additional member selected in some other way. The nominees of
a state are usually its own nationals; sometimes they are treated as
representing it and being under its control, a practice which is in many ways
objectionable.
Disputes submitted to arbitration are of the most varied character. Arbitral
tribunals have dealt with disputes primarily involving legal issues as well as
disputes turning on questions of fact and requiring some appreciation of the
merits of the controversy. As a rule such tribunals have not declined to deal
with a matter either on the ground that no recognised legal rules were
applicable or on the ground that political aspects were involved. For this
reason the distinction frequently drawn by writers on international law between
justiciable and
nonjusticiable disputes is a little difficult to understand
and does not appear to have much practical value.
In as much, however, as by
special clauses in their arbitration treaties, states often exclude from
arbitration disputes affecting their
Vital interests, or concerning only
matters of
domestic jurisdiction, such reserved disputes may in a sense be
non-justiciable, and open only to the procedure of conciliation. An
illustration is the clause in the Anglo-French Arbitration Treaty of
1903 whereby the two states bound themselves not to arbitrate disputes which
affect the vital interests, the independence, or the honour of the parties.
A
more intelligible distinction is that between legal and non-legal disputes (e.g,
article 36 of the United Nations Charter). There has arisen recently a trend
towards appointing current judges of the International Court of Justice as
members of arbitral tribunals. This has occurred in such cases as the
Anglo-French Continental Shelf Arbitration (1977, 1978) and the Guinea - Guinea
Bissau Arbitration (1985).
This trend may diminish as the caseload of the
International Court of Justice, increases, and as the alternative of using
chambers of that court becomes more attractive. There will always be a place for
arbitration in the relations between states. Arbitral procedure is more
appropriate than judicial settlement for technical disputes, and less expensive,
while, if necessary, arbitrations can be conducted without publicity, even to
the extent that parties can agree that awards be not published.
Moreover, the
general principles governing the practice and powers of arbitral tribunals are
fairly well recognised. Lastly, arbitral procedure is flexible enough to be
combined with the fact-finding processes which are availed of in the case of
negotiation, good offices, mediation, conciliation, and inquiry.
(b) Judicial settlement:
By judicial settlement is meant a settlement brought
about by a properly constituted international judicial tribunal, applying rules
of law. The only general organ of judicial settlement at present available in
the international community is the International Court of Justice at The Hague,
which succeeded to and preserves continuity with the Permanent Court of
International Justice. Its inaugural sitting was held on 18 April 1946, the very
date on which its predecessor, the latter Court, was dissolved by the League of
Nations Assembly at its final session.
The essential difference between the
Court, on the one hand, and an arbitral tribunal, on the other hand, can be seen
by reference to the following points:
- The Court is a permanently constituted tribunal, governed by a statute
and its own body of rules of procedure, binding on all parties having
recourse to the Court.
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- It possesses a permanent registry, performing all the necessary
functions of receiving documents for filing, recording, and authentication,
general court services, and acting as a regular channel of communication
with government and other bodies.
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- Proceedings are public, while in due course the pleadings and records of
the hearings and judgments are published.
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- In principle, the Court is accessible to all states for the judicial
settlement of all cases which states may be able to refer to it, and of all
matters specially provided for in treaties and conventions in force.
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- Article 38 of its Statute specifically sets out the different forms of
law which the Court is to apply in cases and matters brought before it,
without prejudice to the power of the Court to decide a case ex aequo et bono if the
parties agree to that course. (Although not ex aequo et bono in the strict
sense, equitable principles have been applied by the Court in the most recent
cases before it in regard to maritime and territorial boundary delimitation).
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- The membership of the Court is representative of the greater part of the
international community, and of the principal legal systems, to an extent
that is not the case with any other tribunal. (Currently six of the Court's judges
come from countries in Africa and Asia, whereas initially only two judges came
from these countries.)
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- In the result, it is possible for the Court to develop a
consistent practice in its proceedings, and to maintain a certain continuity
of outlook to a degree that is not feasible with ad hoc tribunals.
The International Court of Justice was established pursuant to Chapter XIV
(articles 92-96) of the United Nations Charter drawn up at San Francisco in
1945. Article 92 of the Charter declares that the Court is
the principal
judicial organ of the United Nations, and provides that the Court is to
function in accordance with a Statute, forming
an integral part of the
Charter.
By contrast, the Court's predecessor, the Permanent Court of
International Justice, was not an organ of the League of Nations, although in
some measure linked to the League. In as much as the International Court of
Justice is firmly anchored in the system of the United Nations, member states
are just as much bound to the Court as to any other principal organ of the
United Nations, while reciprocal duties of co-operation with each other bind the
Court and United Nations organs, and indeed in 1986 on the occasion of the
Court's 40th anniversary, the President (Judge Nagendra Singh) declared that in
the area of peaceful settlement of disputes the Court and UN Security Council
were
complementary organs.
Also the Court is bound by the Purposes and
Principles of the United Nations as these are expressed in articles 1 and 2 of
the Charter, and because the Court's Statute is annexed to the Charter and is an
integral part of it, the context of the Charter is a controlling factor in the
interpretation of the provisions of the Statute.
As an illustration of the fact
that the Court has exercised jurisdiction over the whole range of international
law, the following diverse subjects have been among those it has dealt with:
maritime and territorial boundary delimitation disputes, non-use of force,
non-intervention, decolonisation, treaty law and treaty interpretation, nuclear
tests, diplomatic and consular law, state responsibility, treatment of aliens,
the status of foreign investments, asylum, nationality and guardianship.
(c) Negotiation, good offices, mediation, conciliation, or inquiry Negotiation,
good offices, mediation, conciliation, and inquiry are methods of settlement
less formal than either judicial settlement or arbitration.
Little need be said
concerning negotiation except that it frequently proceeds in conjunction with
good offices or mediation, although reference should be made to the now growing
trend of providing, by international instrument or arrangement, legal frameworks
for two processes of consultation, both prior consultation and post-event
consultation, and communication, without which in some circumstances negotiation
cannot proceed.
Illustrations of the former are the provisions for consultation
in the Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement of 31 August 1965, and of the
latter, the United States-Soviet Memorandum of Understanding, Geneva, 20 June
1963 for a direct communication link-the so-called 'hot line'-between Washington
and Moscow in case of crisis.
The value of continued negotiation was illustrated
by the conclusion of the US-Soviet Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Agreement
(INF) in December 1987 after the earlier unsuccessful talks between the two
countries at Reykjavik, Iceland; the latter talks although abortive had
nonetheless clarified some overhanging issues. Both good offices and mediation
are methods of settlement in which, usually, a friendly third state assists in
bringing about an amicable solution of the dispute.
But the party tendering good
offices or mediating may also, in certain cases, be an individual or an
international organ (of the tender of good offices by the United Nations
Security Council in 1947 in the dispute between the Netherlands and the Republic
of Indonesia). The distinction between good offices and mediation is to a large
extent a matter of degree. In the case of good offices, a third party tenders
its services in order to bring the disputing parties together, and to suggest
(in general terms) the making of a settlement, without itself actually
participating in the negotiations or conducting an exhaustive inquiry into the
various aspects of the dispute.
Hence, once the parties have been brought
together for the purpose of working out a solution of their controversies,
strictly speaking the state or party tendering good offices has no further
active duties to perform (article X of the Pact of Bogota, i.e. the
Inter-American Treaty on Pacific Settlement of 30 April 1948). In the case of
mediation, on the other hand, the mediating party has a more active role, and
participates in the negotiations and directs them in such a way that a peaceful
solution may be reached, although any suggestions made by it are of no binding
effect upon the parties.
The initiative of the Soviet Government at the end of
1965 and early in 1966 in bringing representatives of India and Pakistan
together at Tashkent to settle the conflict between them, and in creating a
propitious atmosphere, for a settlement, seems to have lain somewhere between
good offices and mediation.
It is likewise difficult to fit into the traditional third party roles in the
settlement of disputes the part played by the Government of Algeria in procuring
a resolution in January 1981 of the United States-Iranian dispute-perhaps better
described as a 'crisis' in the relations of the United States and Iran-over the
detention of American nationals (diplomatic and consular staff in particular) in
Iran.
In the relevant documents it was stated that the Algerian Government had
been
requested by the disputant parties
to serve as an intermediary in
seeking a mutually acceptable resolution, and that it had consulted
extensively with the two governments as to the commitments which each is willing
to make in order to resolve the crisis.
Moreover, the Algerian Government made
two Declarations, attesting the commitments and agreements of the disputant
parties, including an agreement for the establishment of an International
Arbitral Tribunal, designated as the Iran-United States Arbitral Tribunal, to
decide claims of American nationals against Iran, and claims of Iranian
nationals against the United States.
If the Algerian Government's part cannot be categorised as pertaining entirely to conciliation, or good offices, or
mediation, it was nevertheless effective in achieving a settlement involving,
among other points, the release of the detained American nationals. The scope of
both good offices and mediation is limited; there is a lack of any procedure in
both methods for conducting a thorough investigation into the facts or the law.
Hence, in the future, the greatest possibilities for both methods lie as steps
preliminary or ancillary to the more specialised techniques of conciliation, of
inquiry, and of settlement through the United Nations. The term
conciliation
has both a broad and a narrow meaning. In its more general sense, it covers the
great variety of methods whereby a dispute is amicably settled with the aid of
other states or of impartial bodies of inquiry or advisory committees.
In the
narrow sense, 'conciliation' signifies the reference of a dispute to a
commission or committee to make a report with proposals to the parties for
settlement, such proposals not being of a binding character.
According to
Judge Manley O. Hudson:
Conciliation is a process of formulating proposals of
settlement after an investigation of the facts and an effort to reconcile
opposing contentions, the parties to the dispute being left free to accept or
reject the proposals formulated.
The fact that the parties are perfectly free
to decide whether or not to adopt the proposed terms of settlement distinguishes
conciliation from arbitration, and has the consequence that conciliation can be
used to settle any kind of dispute or situation. Conciliation Commissions were
provided for in the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 for the Pacific
Settlement of International Disputes (Title III and Part III of these
conventions).
Such Commissions could be set up by special agreement between the
parties, and were to investigate and report on situations of fact with the
proviso that the report in no way bound the parties to the dispute. The actual
provisions in the conventions avoid any words suggesting compulsion on the
parties to accept a Commission's report. Similar Commissions were also set up
under a series of treaties negotiated by the United States in 1913 and the
following years, known as the 'Bryan Treaties'. Other treaties providing for
conciliation are the Brussels Treaty of 17 March 1948, and the Pact of Bogota of
1948.
The value of Conciliation Commissions as such has been doubted by several
authorities, but the procedure of conciliation itself proved most useful and
important when employed by the League of Nations Council to settle international
disputes. The Council's use of conciliation was extremely flexible; generally a
small committee, or a person known as a rapporteur, was appointed to make
tactful investigations and suggest a method of composing the differences between
the parties. States do attach great value to the procedure of conciliation, as
reflected in the provision made for it in the Convention of 18 March 1965, on
the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other
States.
The object of an inquiry is, without making specific recommendations, to
establish the facts, which may be in dispute, and thereby prepare the way for a
negotiated adjustment. Thus, frequently, in cases of disputed boundaries, a
commission may be appointed to inquire into the historical and geographical
facts which are the subject of controversy and thus clarify the issues for a
boundary agreement.
Also, sometimes an expert fact-finding committee is
necessary to inquire into certain special facts for the purposes of preliminary
elucidation. Obviously one or more of the above methods, negotiation, good
offices, mediation, conciliation, inquiry, and fact-finding may be used in
combination with the other or others. Various endeavours have been made to
improve processes of settlement, and render them even more flexible.
The
proposals have included the extension of fact-finding methods, and the creation
of a fact-finding organ or fact-finding centre. On 18 December 1967, the United
Nations General Assembly adopted a Resolution, upholding the usefulness of the
method of impartial fact finding as a mode of peaceful settlement, and in which
it urged member states to make more effective use of fact-finding methods, and
requested the Secretary-General to prepare a register of experts whose services
could be used by agreement for fact-finding in relation to a dispute.
Subsequently, in accordance with the Resolution, nominations of experts were
received for the purposes of the register (Note by Secretary-General, Document
A/7240), and each year the Secretary- General has transmitted to member states
lists of experts so nominated. Existing facilities for fact-finding include
those provided by the Panel for Inquiry and Conciliation set up by the General
Assembly in April 1949.
Special mention should also be made of the provisions
for inquiries into alleged violations of international humanitarian law under
the Geneva Conventions, 1949 (First Convention, art 52, Second Convention, art
53, Third Convention, art 132, Fourth Convention, art 149), and of the
International Fact-Finding Commission established under Additional Protocol I to
the Geneva Conventions (1977), art 90. Reference should be made to the Manila
Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes, approved by
consensus by the General Assembly in 1982, and which may be regarded partly as a
code of rules on the subject, partly as a manifesto of guidelines and
desiderata, and partly as an elaborate hortatory instrument.
In more vigorous
language, many of the principles contained in that connection in the United
Nations Charter are reaffirmed, states are required to have recourse to the
traditional techniques of dispute-settlement already mentioned, and their
attention is drawn to all the available options for peaceful resolution of their
differences.
Some special points are made in the Manila Declaration, as follows:
- States should bear in mind that direct negotiations are a flexible and
effective means of peaceful settlement of disputes, and if they choose to
resort to direct negotiations, they should negotiate meaningfully.
- States are enjoined to consider making greater use of the fact-finding
capacity of the Security Council in accordance with the United Nations
Charter.
- Recourse to judicial settlement of legal disputes, particularly by way
of referral to the International Court of Justice, should not be considered
as an unfriendly act between states.
- The Secretary-General of the United Nations should make full use of the
provisions of the Charter concerning his special responsibilities, e.g, bringing
to the attention of the Security Council any matter which in his opinion may
threaten the maintenance of international peace and security.
Although it may be felt-that there is little that is novel in the Manila
Declaration, the reaffirmation of established precepts in more elaborate and
categorical language can be of value.
(d) Settlement under Auspices of United Nations Organisation
As successor to the League of Nations, the United Nations Organisation, created
in 1945, has taken over the bulk of the responsibility for adjusting
international disputes. One of the fundamental objects of the Organisation is
the peaceful settlement of differences between states, and by article 2 of the
United Nations Charter, Members of the Organisation have undertaken to settle
their disputes by peaceful means and to refrain from threats of war or the use
of force. In this connection, important responsibilities devolve on the General
Assembly and on the Security Council, corresponding to which wide powers are
entrusted to both bodies.
The General Assembly is given authority, subject to
the peace enforcement powers of the Security Council, to recommend measures for
the peaceful adjustment of any situation which is likely to impair general
welfare or friendly relations among nations (article 14 of the Charter). The
more extensive powers, however, have been conferred on the Security Council in
order that it should execute swiftly and decisively the policy of the United
Nations.
The Council acts, broadly speaking, in two kinds of disputes:
- disputes which may endanger international peace and security;
- cases of threats to the peace, or breaches of peace, or acts of
aggression.
In the former case, the Council, when necessary, may call on the parties to
settle their disputes by the methods considered above, viz, arbitration,
judicial settlement, negotiation, inquiry, mediation, and conciliation. Also the
Council may at any stage recommend appropriate procedures or methods of
adjustment for settling such disputes. In the latter case, (ii) above, the
Council is empowered to make recommendations or decide what measures are to be
taken to maintain or restore international peace and security, and it may call
on the parties concerned to comply with certain provisional measures.
There is
no restriction or qualification on the recommendations which the Council may
make, or on the measures, final or provisional, which it may decide are
necessary. It may propose a basis of settlement, it may appoint a commission of
inquiry, it may authorise a reference to the International Court of Justice, and
so on. Under articles 41 to 47 of the Charter, the Security Council has also the
right to give effect to its decisions not only by coercive measures such as
economic sanctions, but also by the use of armed force against states which
decline to be bound by these decisions.
With the exception of disputes of an
exclusively legal character which are usually submitted to arbitration or
judicial settlement, it is purely a matter of policy or expediency which of the
above different methods is to be adopted for composing a particular difference
between states. Certain treaties have endeavoured to define the kind of dispute
which should be submitted to arbitration, judicial settlement, or conciliation,
or the order in which recourse should be had to these methods, but experience
has shown the dubious value of any such pre-established definitions or
procedure.
Any one method may be appropriate, and the greater the flexibility
permitted, the more chance there is of an amicable solution. The General Act for
the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes adopted by the League of
Nations Assembly in 1928 was a type of instrument in which a maximum of
flexibility and freedom of choice was sought to be achieved.
It provided
separate procedures, a procedure of conciliation (before Conciliation
Commissions) for all disputes, a procedure of judicial settlement or arbitration
for disputes of a legal character, and a procedure of arbitration for other
disputes. States could accede to the General Act by accepting all or some of the
procedures and were also allowed to make certain defined reservations (for
example, as to prior disputes, as to questions within the domestic jurisdiction,
etc).
The General Act was acceded to by 23 states, but accessions to it were
heavily qualified by reservations. Since its machinery provisions referred to
organs of the League of Nations, defunct after 1946, its utility thereafter was
questioned, but the Act was-successfully relied upon, as at least a prima facie
basis of invoking the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, by
Australia and New Zealand in their actions against France in the Case Concerning
Nuclear Tests.
The Revised General Act, adopted by the United Nations General
Assembly on 28 April 1949, has not been acceded to by a sufficient number of
states to enter into force. In this connection, there should be mentioned the
problem of peaceful change or revision of treaties and the status quo which
troubled publicists a good deal just before the Second World War. Many claimed
that none of the above methods was suitable for settling
revisionist disputes,
and proposed the creation of an International Equity Tribunal which would
adjudicate claims for peaceful change on a basis of fairness and justice.
The
powers which would have been conferred on such a tribunal appear now to be
vested, although not in a very specific or concrete manner, in the United
Nations. Thus art 14 of the United Nations on the law and practice as to
treaties empowers the UN General Assembly to recommend measures for the peaceful
adjustment of any situation 'likely to impair the general welfare or friendly
relations among nations', including situations resulting from a breach of the
Charter.
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