Abstract:
International law was traditionally a horizontal and state-centric system
of rules. Although state-centrism is in decline, it is still reflected in some of the core
concepts and procedures governing contemporary international law. This article
identifies the community-oriented values in the international community that stretch
beyond the interest of sovereign states. It further explores how these values can be
protected by the international community when states abuse their sovereign powers.
Attention is paid to the concepts of Chapter VII powers and limitations on the
authority of the Security Council, as well as the concepts of obligations erga omnes
and norms jus cogens. While the latter two concepts reflect fundamental values of
the international community, they cannot be used as an enforcement mechanism to
address the abuses of sovereign powers. The enforcement can come from Security
Council resolutions adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter. Notably, the
concept of the international peace and security nowadays covers even seemingly
purely domestic gross and systematic violations of human rights. Despite this stretch
of the Security Council’s powers, the community-oriented rules also demand that its
measures need to be interpreted with the framework of international human rights
law in mind. The article concludes that the post-Second World War era has seen a
turn away from state-centrism and toward a community-oriented international legal
system. The international community has acknowledged the existence of a rights-based minimum threshold of a shared value system. However, the enforcement of
this value system remains subject to state-centric procedures. There is no automatic
and readily available remedy against abuses of sovereign powers.