Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Foreword by David D. Caron
- TRANSBOUNDARY HARM IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE TRAIL SMELTER ARBITRATION – HISTORY, LEGACY, AND REVIVAL
- PART TWO TRAIL SMELTER AND CONTEMPORARY TRANSBOUNDARY HARM – THE ENVIRONMENT
- PART THREE TRAIL SMELTER AND CONTEMPORARY TRANSBOUNDARY HARM – BEYOND THE ENVIRONMENT
- 18 Trail Smelter and Terrorism: International Mechanisms to Combat Transboundary Harm
- 19 The Conundrum of Corporate Social Responsibility: Reflections on the Changing Nature of Firms and States
- 20 A Pyrrhic Victory: Applying the Trail Smelter Principle to State Creation of Refugees
- 21 Transboundary Harm: Internet Torts
- 22 International Drug Pollution? Reflections on Trail Smelter and Latin American Drug Trafficking
- 23 Application of International Human Rights Conventions to Transboundary State Acts
- Annex A Convention Between the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada Relative to the Establishment of a Tribunal to Decide Questions of Indemnity and Future Regime Arising from the Operation of Smelter at Trail, British Columbia
- Annex B Trail Smelter Arbitral Tribunal Decision, April 16, 1938
- Annex C Trail Smelter Arbitral Tribunal March 11, 1941, Decision
- Index
18 - Trail Smelter and Terrorism: International Mechanisms to Combat Transboundary Harm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Foreword by David D. Caron
- TRANSBOUNDARY HARM IN INTERNATIONAL LAW
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE TRAIL SMELTER ARBITRATION – HISTORY, LEGACY, AND REVIVAL
- PART TWO TRAIL SMELTER AND CONTEMPORARY TRANSBOUNDARY HARM – THE ENVIRONMENT
- PART THREE TRAIL SMELTER AND CONTEMPORARY TRANSBOUNDARY HARM – BEYOND THE ENVIRONMENT
- 18 Trail Smelter and Terrorism: International Mechanisms to Combat Transboundary Harm
- 19 The Conundrum of Corporate Social Responsibility: Reflections on the Changing Nature of Firms and States
- 20 A Pyrrhic Victory: Applying the Trail Smelter Principle to State Creation of Refugees
- 21 Transboundary Harm: Internet Torts
- 22 International Drug Pollution? Reflections on Trail Smelter and Latin American Drug Trafficking
- 23 Application of International Human Rights Conventions to Transboundary State Acts
- Annex A Convention Between the United States of America and the Dominion of Canada Relative to the Establishment of a Tribunal to Decide Questions of Indemnity and Future Regime Arising from the Operation of Smelter at Trail, British Columbia
- Annex B Trail Smelter Arbitral Tribunal Decision, April 16, 1938
- Annex C Trail Smelter Arbitral Tribunal March 11, 1941, Decision
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
This chapter compares and analyzes the international legal issues arising from transboundary environmental pollution and international terrorism. At first glance, it might appear to be somewhat peculiar to consider such disparate topics alongside one another. However, the potential cross-border effects of terrorism and pollution, as well as the fact that, in the vast majority of cases, the resulting harm is the result of nonstate actors, makes such an examination worthwhile. Moreover, both of these transboundary phenomenons share one vitally important characteristic: they cannot be left to the respective domestic legal orders alone, but need common action in order to raise an effective response.
This examination is facilitated by considering the features of international environmental law arising out of the historic Trail Smelter arbitration and the emerging international law on transboundary terrorism, which allows for a consideration of international law's general mechanisms for combating all manners of transboundary harm. Such a consideration gives rise to the interesting question of whether these legal mechanisms constitute special international law, or whether they are, in fact, merely applications of the general law of state responsibility.
The legal mechanisms developed by international law to combat transboundary pollution and international terrorism share two important features. First, international law has placed the prevention of transboundary harm at the very center of both, whereas the responsibility of states, the “curative” side of international law, does not seem to be the preferred strategy to combat transboundary harm.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Transboundary Harm in International LawLessons from the Trail Smelter Arbitration, pp. 225 - 239Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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