2016 Public International Law Winter Subject Guide
2016 Public International Law Winter Subject Guide
2016 Public International Law Winter Subject Guide
SUBJECT DESCRIPTION
Public international law is the regime of legal rules which primarily seeks to
regulate relations between sovereign states. For example, public international law
defines the minimum standard of treatment which a sovereign state must accord
the nationals of another state on its territory and the responsibility of one state to
another for failure to observe the required standard of treatment. Individuals, to an
increasing extent, also are a direct concern of public international law. Examples
of this development include the international criminal responsibility of individuals
for war crimes and other offences, such as state torture, and the network of
treaties, such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966,
which aspires to define and protect human rights.
The objective of the teaching program in this subject is to give you an opportunity
to gain an appreciation of the role of legal rules in regulating the conduct of states
and individuals in international society and the relationship between Australian law
and public international law.
The teaching program, which is conducted by the Law Extension Committee of
The University of Sydney (LEC), seeks to assist your preparation for the
examination in Public International Law which is conducted by the Legal
Profession Admission Board (LPAB).
II.
The LEC lecturer and LPAB examiner for this subject is Mr Ross Anderson. His
contact details are:
Email: ross.anderson@sydney.edu.au
Telephone: (02) 9351 0258
Ross teaches in the LLB and JD programs at the Sydney Law School. He studied
law at The University of Sydney and University College London and was admitted
as a solicitor in New South Wales in 1973.
III.
ASSESSMENT
Overview
Assessment for this subject comprises a compulsory assignment administered by
the LEC worth 20% of the final mark and the examination conducted by the
LPAB worth 80% of the final mark. The examination is closed book. However, a
case list and statutory/treaty provisions will be supplied in the examination room.
IV.
Lecture Program
The lecture program is as follows. Basic reading for each topic is set out in section
VI below.
Lecture No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Date
Topic/s
09.05.16
Scope of public international law
16.05.16
State jurisdiction
23.05.16
State jurisdiction
First weekend school 27.05.16 29.05.16
30.05.16
Public international law and municipal law
06.06.16
Public international law and municipal law
Study break 18.06.16 03.07.16
04.07.16
11.07.16
Sources of public international law
18.07.16
Immunity from jurisdiction
Second weekend school 22.07.16 24.07.16
25.07.16
Immunity from jurisdiction
01.08.16
08.08.16
15.08.16
State responsibility
State responsibility
Revision questions
Course materials
Public International Law Materials, 2014-2015 edn (issued to students)
Supplementary Materials (see section VIII below)
Reference books
J Crawford, Brownlies Principles of Public International Law, 8th edn, Oxford University
Press, 2012
D J Harris and S Sivakumaran, Cases and Materials on International Law, 8th edn,
Sweet & Maxwell, 2015
A copy of the reference books is on closed reserve in the Law Library.
Webcampus
After you have registered online with the LEC (section III above), you will have
access to Webcampus including links to relevant cases and legislation on the Public
International Law Subject Page and material posted during the semester.
VI.
2.
(a)
(b)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
Opinio juris
Not only must the facts concerned amount to a settled
practice, but they must also be such, or be carried out in such
a way, as to be evidence of a belief that this practice is
rendered obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring
it. The States concerned must therefore feel that they are
conforming to what amounts to a legal obligation. The
frequency, or even habitual character of the acts is not in
itself enough. There are many international acts, e.g. in the
field of ceremonial and protocol which are performed almost
invariably, but which are motivated only by considerations of
courtesy or tradition, and not by any sense of legal duty.
North Sea Continental Shelf Cases (FRG v. Denmark; FRG
v. The Netherlands), Judgment, ICJ Reports 1969, p 3
(Harris, p 20)
(d)
OTHER SOURCES
(i)
(ii)
Article 38(1)(d).
Judicial decisions (municipal and
international) and academic writings (subsidiary means for
the determination of rules of law). A decision of the
10
(iii)
United
Nations
General
Assembly
resolutions
(recommendations to member states under Article 10 of the
Charter of the United Nations 1945) as evidence of customary
international law e.g. unanimous 1946 UNGA resolution
affirming the principles of international law recognized in the
Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal and the judgment of the
Tribunal; unanimous 1963 UNGA resolution declaring the
legal principles governing the activities of states in the
exploration and use of outer space; 1962 UNGA resolution
Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources supported by
both capital exporting and capital importing states
acknowledging that the expropriation of foreign owned
property must be in accordance with international law;
compare 1974 UNGA resolution Charter of Economic Rights
and Duties of States which provided that the payment of
compensation for the expropriation of foreign owned property
should be determined by the municipal law of the
expropriating state: a political rather than a legal declaration
(Texaco) opposed by major capital exporting states although
receiving overall majority support of states.
11
3.
(a)
(ii)
(iii)
*Arbitration between Sandline International and Papua New Guinea 117 ILR
552 (1998) (Materials, p 239A)
*Questions relating to the Obligation to Prosecute or Extradite (Belgium v.
Senegal), Judgment, ICJ, 20 July 2012 (Supplementary Materials)
(b)
12
13
14
(c)
15
(iii)
16
62
17
(iv)
4.
STATE JURISDICTION
Brownlie, chs 20, 21
Harris, ch 6 (pp 223-254)
State jurisdiction is the power of a state under international
law to govern persons and property by its municipal law.
D J Harris and S Sivakumaran, Cases and Materials on
International Law, 8th edn, 2015, p 223
(a)
CIVIL JURISDICTION
18
Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co v. Fay (1988) 165 CLR 197
(jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of New South Wales over a Greek
corporation in respect of tort proceedings to recover damages for
personal injury suffered by a passenger in an accident on a Greek
owned and registered cruise ship in Greek territorial waters)
HRH Maharanee of Baroda v. Wildenstein [1972] 2 QB 283 (jurisdiction
of the English High Court in proceedings for rescission of a contract
made in France between residents of France and governed by French
law where the only connection of the defendant with England was his
fleeting or transient presence for a day to attend a race meeting where
he was served with the originating process)
(ii)
19
(b)
CRIMINAL JURISDICTION
(i)
20
(ii)
21
22
Treason
No principle of comity demands that a state should ignore
the crime of treason committed against it outside its territory.
On the contrary a proper regard for its own security requires
that all those who commit that crime, whether they commit it
within or outside the realm should be amenable to its laws.
Joyce v. DPP [1946] AC 347 per Lord Jowitt LC
23
24
25
Manslaughter
*"Lotus" Ann Digest 1927-1928, Case No 98, p 153 (Materials, p 232)
Conspiracy to murder
United States v. Benitez 741 F 2d 1312 (1984)
Hostage-taking
*United States v. Fawaz Yunis 30 ILM 403 (1991) (Supplementary
Materials)
Offences against Australians
26
27
5.
(a)
28
29
30
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
31
(c)
32
*Foreign States Immunities Act 1985 (Com) ss 3, 6, 9, 11, 13, 14, 22, 30,
32-35 (Materials, p 305)
*Zhang v. Zemin (2010) 243 FLR 299; special leave refused: [2011]
HCATrans 134 (Supplementary Materials)
*PT Garuda Indonesia v. Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission (2012) 290 ALR 681 (Supplementary Materials)
*Firebird Global Master Fund II v. Republic of Nauru [2015] HCA 43
(Supplementary Materials)
33
(iv)
Four illustrations
Argentine attack on Liberian tanker on the high seas
6.
*Smith v. Socialist Peoples Libyan Arab Jamahiriya 113 ILR 534 (1997)
(Materials, p 315)
STATE RESPONSIBILITY
Brownlie, chs 23, 24, 25, 28
Harris, ch 8
*Draft Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful
Acts, International Law Commission, 2001, Articles 1, 2, 4, 7, 10
(Materials, p 315B)
(a)
(ii)
(iii)
34
35
(iv)
The Hull formula was propounded by United States Secretary of State Cordell Hull in
1938 in the context of the expropriation of foreign owned oil fields by Mexico.
36
37
(c)
38
(ii)
39
40
VII.
REVISION QUESTIONS
The bold headings are an indication of the principal topic or topics you should
consider in relation to each question. Issues arising in other topics in the course
may also require consideration.
Scope of public international law
Question 1
With reference to particular examples, discuss the status of individuals and other
non-state entities or actors in public international law.
Question 1A
In Kadic v. Karadzic 70 F 3d 232 (1995), a decision of the United States Court of
Appeals, Second Circuit, Newman CJ observed (at p 239):
We do not agree that the law of nations [public international
law], as understood in the modern era, confines its reach to state
action. Instead, we hold that certain forms of conduct violate the
law of nations whether undertaken by those acting under the
auspices of a state or only as private individuals.
Comment on this observation with particular reference to individual and corporate
responsibility for violations of public international law.
Sources of public international law
Question 2
Explain the role of state consent as the source of the rules of public international
law.
Public international law and municipal law
Question 3
In Commercial and Estates Co of Egypt v. Board of Trade [1925] 1 KB 271 Atkin
LJ said:
International law as such can confer no rights cognisable in the
municipal courts. It is only in so far as the rules of international law
are recognised as included in the rules of municipal law that they are
allowed in municipal courts to give rise to rights and obligations.
Does Atkin LJ's statement accurately reflect the relationship between public
international law and Australian law?
41
Question 3A
The traditional view, at least in English law, is that customary international law is
part of the law of the land.
With specific examples from the decided cases, comment on the relationship
between customary international law and Australian law.
State jurisdiction
Question 4
Rivard v. United States 375 F 2d 882 (1967) concerned the prosecution in the
United States of Canadian nationals who had conspired outside the United States
to import heroin into the United States. Dyer, Circuit Judge, in considering
whether the courts of the United States had jurisdiction over the alleged offenders,
observed (at p 885):
The law of nations [public international law] permits the exercise of criminal
jurisdiction by a nation under five general principles. They are the territorial,
national, protective, universality, and passive personality principles.
Discuss this observation. By reference to which of the five general principles
might the courts of the United States have jurisdiction in a case such as Rivard v.
United States?
Question 4A
Identify and compare (using illustrations from the decided cases) the elements of
genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes as crimes against public
international law. Looking back to the period of the Second World War and taking
into account later developments, explain the circumstances in which an Australian
court may exercise jurisdiction in respect of these crimes when committed outside
Australia.
State jurisdiction and immunity from jurisdiction
Question 5
During a military dictatorship in a foreign state thousands of persons suspected of
being pro-democracy supporters were murdered by government military forces
under the command of General Jorge Ubico. Almost all the murdered persons
were members of a religious minority. Three of the murdered persons were
residents of Australia who were visiting relatives in the foreign state.
In the process of transition from military dictatorship to democracy which is now
taking place in the foreign state, General Ubico recently was appointed Minister
for Fisheries and presently is on a private (trout fishing) visit to New South Wales.
In the Australian media and the federal parliament demands are being made that
General Ubico be brought to justice in Australia for the murders committed by
the forces under his command during the military dictatorship.
42
What would your advice be if, at the time of the incident giving rise to Henry's
personal injuries, Electra was the daughter of a diplomatic agent accredited to the
diplomatic mission of the foreign state in Australia and the incident happened as
Electra was returning by car to her parents' residence after a holiday?
Question 6A
Give an account of the immunity from Australian jurisdiction in criminal and civil
cases of the head of state of a foreign state and the former head of state of a
foreign state.
43
State responsibility
Question 7
In the Indonesian province of Aceh, an ethnic-based separatist movement, the Free
Aceh Movement, is seeking to establish the independence of Aceh from Indonesia.
Attempts by the Indonesian army to suppress this movement by force have been
accompanied by human rights abuses, including the summary execution of local
unarmed civilians. Against this background, the following report was published in
The Sydney Morning Herald on 6 June 2003.
German tourist in Aceh killed by military
Indonesian politicians and military commanders
were last night struggling to contain damaging
fallout after soldiers in Aceh attacked two German
tourists on a cycling holiday, killing a man and
shooting his wife in the leg.
Indonesias top security minister, Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, expressed deep concern and ordered
an investigation into what is the latest in a series of
shootings of unarmed people by soldiers in Aceh
since war resumed on May 19.
The Welfare Minister, Yusuf Kalla, warned that the
shooting of foreigners in Aceh will definitely
trouble us in the same way the killing of foreigners
in West Timor several years ago had reverberated
around the world.
In respect of the death and injury of the German tourists referred to in this report,
explain the principles of state responsibility. What would your answer be if the
death and injury of the German tourists had been caused by members of the Free
Aceh Movement rather than by the Indonesian army?
Question 8
Diaz, who was born in Pandora (a sovereign state) and acquired Pandora
nationality at birth, emigrated to Australia and was granted Australian nationality.
The acquisition of Australian nationality did not affect Diazs Pandora nationality.
Diaz established a manufacturing business, Diaz Manufacturing, which was
incorporated in New South Wales with its head office in that Australian state.
Although Diaz remained a director of Diaz Manufacturing, the share capital of the
company and its ownership and control was acquired by Swedish nationals. Diaz
Manufacturing developed a market in Pandora for its goods and established a
factory in Pandora for local manufacture.
A dispute arose between Australia and Sweden, on the one hand, and Pandora, on
the other, concerning Pandoras colonial occupation of adjoining territory and
Australias and Swedens efforts to bring that occupation to an end by international
pressure. As a retaliatory measure, the Pandora government appointed temporary
44
45
VIII.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
Scope of public international law
State jurisdiction
46
R v. Casement [1917] 1 KB 98
Harb v. Prince Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz [2015] 1 All ER 77
(Rose J); appeal dismissed [2015] EWCA Civ 481
47
State responsibility