The UN Security Council's transition to 'targeted sanctions' in the 1990s marked a revolutionary shift in the locus of the Council's decision-making from states to individuals. The establishment of the targeted sanctions regime, should be regarded as more than a shift in policy and invites attention to an emerging tier of international governance.
This book examines the need to develop a due process framework having regard to the uniquely political and crisis-based context in which the Security Council operates. Drawing on Anglo-American jurisprudence, this book develops procedural principles for the international institutional context using a value-based approach as an alternative to the formalistic approach taken in the literature to date. In doing so, it is recognized that due process is more than a set of discrete legal standards, but is a touchstone for the way the international legal order conceives of far larger questions about community, law and values.
Monday, January 25, 2016
Hovell: The Power of Process: The Value of Due Process in Security Council Sanctions Decision-Making
Devika Hovell (London School of Economics - Law) has published The Power of Process: The Value of Due Process in Security Council Sanctions Decision-Making (Oxford Univ. Press 2016). Here's the abstract: