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The International Protection of Human Rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

On 16 December 1966 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted three important instruments concerning human rights. These were the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, both adopted unanimously; and also an Optional Protocol to the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which was adopted by majority vote. The adoption of these texts represents one more step in the slow, but on the whole steady, progress towards an International Bill of Rights. When this project was first mooted after the Second World War, it was realized that at least three distinct stages would be necessary. First, there would have to be broad international agreement on the rights to be enjoyed by every human being. Secondly, States would have to accept a definite legal obligation to afford these rights to all persons within their jurisdiction. Thirdly, there would have to be provisions for enforcement.

These proposals sound simple enough, but it is as well to realize how revolutionary they were at the time and how many and serious are the obstacles that still have to be overcome before they can be implemented.

Traditional international law was a legal system applying essentially between States, although it made provision also for what the International Court of Justice has called ‘instances of action upon the international plane by certain entities which are not States’. Such instances have been performed by a miscellaneous collection of entities including the Holy See, the Sovereign Order of Malta, international institutions such as the United Nations and the Specialized Agencies, and even rebels granted belligerent status without yet having been recognized as States.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1968 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

page 363 note 1 An interesting parallel could be drawn between these faltering steps to promote the international protection of human rights in 1945–48 and the timid measures proposed by the Congress of Vienna for the prohibition of the slave trade in 1815. It is a sobering thought that, although in the subsequent 150 years efforts to stamp out slavery and the slave trade have been largely successful, they still have not been entirely so.

page 363 note 2 In British terms the admission of women to the House of Lords may have owed something to this Convention.

page 365 note 1 This sits in Strasbourg and is not to be confused with the Court of Justice of the European Communities (European Economic Community, European Coal and Steel Community and European Atomic Energy Community) which sits in Luxembourg.

page 366 note 1 Pacem in Term; Encyclical Letter of April 11th, 1963, paragraph 144, translated by the Rev. H. E. Winstone, M.A. (Catholic Truth Society, S.264.)