This paper discusses transparency in the working method of the United Nations Security Council. It describes the institutional design of the organ and the evolution of Security Council powers, and seeks to identify whether there is an obligation for the Council to act in a transparent manner in the exercise of its powers. The paper argues that transparency is an 'ancillary' obligation incumbent on the Council, to allow for decentralised control over the exercise of its powers by Member States of the UN. Transparency having no independent normative charge, we do not how much of it is good--this is determined by a pattern of protest and reaction between the Security Council and the Member States called upon to implement its decisions.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Tzanakopoulos: Transparency in the Security Council
Antonios Tzanakopoulos (Univ. College London - Law) has posted Transparency in the Security Council (in Transparency in International Law, Andrea Bianchi & Anne Peters eds, forthcoming). Here's the abstract: