Immunities of Foreign Officials for International Crimes: The Dilemmas of Strategic Litigation

Author:

Mégret Frédéric1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dawson Scholar and Professor, co-Director Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism, Faculty of Law, McGill University , Montreal , Canada

Abstract

Abstract This article analyses the elusive search to restrict immunities for foreign officials accused of international crimes as a form of strategic litigation. It emphasizes how litigation ‘constitutes’ legal reality beyond particular victories. Problematizing ‘success’ in litigation makes it possible to pay attention to unintended effects and even perverse outcomes of certain strategic routes. A proper understanding of success as more than victory is then used to assess three routes that have been used to try and limit, circumvent or oppose functional immunities of former officials. These routes are found not to be of even value for human rights, independently of their legal validity or their odds of success: the idea that international crimes are not committed as part of state functions trivializes the ‘public’ character of most international crimes; the argument that the jus cogens norm that prohibits international crimes trumps immunities either constantly needs to be finessed or sets up too dramatic a showdown; the idea that immunities offend human rights finds some favour as the one that is closest to the heart of human rights, although its tendency to symbolically sanctify the right to prosecutions could also have problematic ripple effects. Offered as a contribution to thinking through the rights implications of litigation, the article insists on the responsibility of human rights lawyers in creating legal worlds of their own making.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Law,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History

Reference55 articles.

1. Immunities of State Officials, International Crimes, and Foreign Domestic Courts;Akande;European Journal of International Law,2010

2. The ‘International Crime’ Exception in the ILC Draft Articles on the Immunity of State Officials from Foreign Criminal Jurisdiction: Two Steps Back?;Alebeek;American Journal of International Law,2018

3. The Fuhrer Principle of International Law: Individual Responsibility and Collective Punishment;Backer;Penn State International Law Review,2002

4. Tackling the Evaluation Challenge in Human Rights: Assessing the Impact of Strategic Litigation Organisations;Barber;International Journal of Human Rights,2012

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