Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction: understanding global procedural justice
- Part I Procedural rights and Magna Carta's legacy
- Part II Habeas corpus and 'jus cogens'
- Chapter 5 Habeas corpus as a minimalist right
- Chapter 6 Due process, judicial review, and expanding habeas corpus
- Chapter 7 Habeas corpus as jus cogens in international law
- Part III Deportation, outlawry, and trial by jury
- Part IV Security and global institutions
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 7 - Habeas corpus as jus cogens in international law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction: understanding global procedural justice
- Part I Procedural rights and Magna Carta's legacy
- Part II Habeas corpus and 'jus cogens'
- Chapter 5 Habeas corpus as a minimalist right
- Chapter 6 Due process, judicial review, and expanding habeas corpus
- Chapter 7 Habeas corpus as jus cogens in international law
- Part III Deportation, outlawry, and trial by jury
- Part IV Security and global institutions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
As we saw in previous chapters, for hundreds of years procedural rights such as habeas corpus have been regarded as fundamental in the Anglo-American system of jurisprudence. In contemporary international law, fundamental norms are called jus cogens. Jus cogens norms are rights or rules that cannot be derogated even by treaty. In the list that is often given, jus cogens norms include norms against aggression, apartheid, slavery, and genocide. All of the entries in this list are substantive rights. In this chapter I will argue that some procedural rights, crucial for the functioning of criminal proceedings, such as habeas corpus, should also have the status of jus cogens norms.
I will begin by explaining what it means for a right to have jus cogens status. And I will follow this with a defense of having procedural rights like habeas corpus added to the list of jus cogens norms. I will then rehearse some of the debates about the jus cogens status of procedural rights in the European Commission on Human Rights. At the end of this chapter I will look at the attempts to deal with the abuses at Guantanamo by the American Commission on Human Rights, and by the US and Australian courts, as a way to understand why there needs to be a stronger support for habeas corpus than is today provided by regional courts. Procedural rights can have the status of gap-fillers in international criminal law, making it possible to cover much more abuse than can be captured under prohibitions against specific substantive rights violations. I also consider a significant objection to my view.
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- Information
- Global Justice and Due Process , pp. 120 - 142Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010