THE COHERENCE OF EU LAW: THE PROMOTION OF INVESTMENTS VS. THE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS

2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo Savarese

Among the challenging legal questions which the new competence of the European Union (EU) in the field of investments abroad raises, one deserves particular attention, namely coherence between the protection of investments and the promotion of human rights and democracy within EU law. After examining general EU policy, the paper then examines the normative and procedural relationship between investment law and human rights law that emerges from arbitral case law. While areas of convergence exist, these two regimes appear to operate within a legal framework of mutual indifference. However, human rights law and related concerns represent both general principles of EU law and EU policy of paramount importance in the development of external relations. As a result, EU institutions must ensure the coherence of investment policy with human rights law and policy. The issue of coherence may be viewed from a policy perspective, with particular regard to the specific powers entrusted to the Commission, the Parliament and the Council of Europe and the current exercise of such powers. In this regard, the more the standards of investors’ protection under investment agreements are premised on clear definitions, exceptions and limitations, the more the adoption of State measures for the protection of human rights will fall within the circumstances precluding wrongfulness. In addition, the coherence issue has a normative component which concerns the compatibility of future EU International Investment Agreements (IIAs) with primary and secondary EU law. Conflicts between future EU IIAs and EU law may undermine the uniform application of EU law. Similarly, these conflicts may lead the assertion of the supremacy of EU law resulting in the violation of EU IIAs. Normative conflicts can and ought to be minimized.Among the challenging legal questions which the new competence of the European Union (EU) in the field of investments abroad raises, one deserves particular attention, namely coherence between the protection of investments and the promotion of human rights and democracy within EU law. After examining general EU policy, the paper then examines the normative and procedural relationship between investment law and human rights law that emerges from arbitral case law. While areas of convergence exist, these two regimes appear to operate within a legal framework of mutual indifference. However, human rights law and related concerns represent both general principles of EU law and EU policy of paramount importance in the development of external relations. As a result, EU institutions must ensure the coherence of investment policy with human rights law and policy. The issue of coherence may be viewed from a policy perspective, with particular regard to the specific powers entrusted to the Commission, the Parliament and the Council of Europe and the current exercise of such powers. In this regard, the more the standards of investors’ protection under investment agreements are premised on clear definitions, exceptions and limitations, the more the adoption of State measures for the protection of human rights will fall within the circumstances precluding wrongfulness. In addition, the coherence issue has a normative component which concerns the compatibility of future EU International Investment Agreements (IIAs) with primary and secondary EU law. Conflicts between future EU IIAs and EU law may undermine the uniform application of EU law. Similarly, these conflicts may lead the assertion of the supremacy of EU law resulting in the violation of EU IIAs. Normative conflicts can and ought to be minimized.Among the challenging legal questions which the new competence of the European Union (EU) in the field of investments abroad raises, one deserves particular attention, namely coherence between the protection of investments and the promotion of human rights and democracy within EU law. After examining general EU policy, the paper then examines the normative and procedural relationship between investment law and human rights law that emerges from arbitral case law. While areas of convergence exist, these two regimes appear to operate within a legal framework of mutual indifference. However, human rights law and related concerns represent both general principles of EU law and EU policy of paramount importance in the development of external relations. As a result, EU institutions must ensure the coherence of investment policy with human rights law and policy. The issue of coherence may be viewed from a policy perspective, with particular regard to the specific powers entrusted to the Commission, the Parliament and the Council of Europe and the current exercise of such powers. In this regard, the more the standards of investors’ protection under investment agreements are premised on clear definitions, exceptions and limitations, the more the adoption of State measures for the protection of human rights will fall within the circumstances precluding wrongfulness. In addition, the coherence issue has a normative component which concerns the compatibility of future EU International Investment Agreements (IIAs) with primary and secondary EU law. Conflicts between future EU IIAs and EU law may undermine the uniform application of EU law. Similarly, these conflicts may lead the assertion of the supremacy of EU law resulting in the violation of EU IIAs. Normative conflicts can and ought to be minimized.

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-347
Author(s):  
Sofia Galani

Abstract Over the years, the European Union (EU) and its Member States have taken significant steps to enhance maritime security. However, these initiatives are mostly focused on the safety of ships and the protection of the marine environment rather than the protection of human rights at sea. Without belittling the importance of these initiatives, this article argues that it is time the protection of human rights at sea was also incorporated in the efforts to enhance maritime security. This argument is supported by the analysis of the legal framework which shows that the EU and its Member States as flag, coastal or port States have assumed responsibility to protect human rights at sea under the law of the sea, human rights law and EU law.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-302
Author(s):  
Fisnik Korenica ◽  
Dren Doli

The European Union (eu) accession to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (echr) has been a hot topic in the European legal discourse in this decade. Ruling on the compliance of the Draft Agreement on eu accession to the echr with the eu Treaties, the Court of Justice of the eu (cjeu) came up with a rather controversial Opinion. It ruled that the Draft Agreement is incompliant with the eu Treaties in several respects. One of the core concerns in Opinion 2/13 relates to the management of horizontal relationship between the eu Charter of Fundamental Rights (ChFR) and echr, namely Article 53 ChFR and Article 53 echr. The article examines the Opinion 2/13’s specific concerns on the relationship between Article 53 ChFR and Article 53 echr from a post-accession perspective. It starts by considering the question of the two 53s’ relationship from the eu-law autonomy viewpoint, indicating the main gaps that may present a danger to the latter. While questioning from a number of perspectives the plausibility of the cjeu’s arguments in relation to the two 53s, the article argues that the Court was both controversial and argued against itself when it drew harshly upon these concerns. The article also presents three options to address the cjeu’s requirements on this issue. The article concludes that the cjeu’s statements on the two 53s will seriously hurt the accession project, while critically limiting the possibility of Member States to provide broader protection.


Author(s):  
Mikaela Heikkilä ◽  
Elina Pirjatanniemi

Numerous terrorist attacks both within and outside the European Union (EU or the Union) have prompted the Union to increasingly act in the field of counter-terrorism. Since the adoption of the Union’s counter-terrorism strategy in 2005, the Union’s action in relation to counter-terrorism has been based on four connected pillars: to prevent, to protect, to pursue, and to respond. A general trend in the Union’s counter-terrorism action has been a move towards a pre-emptive approach, where the focus lies on countering terrorism threats in advance. The aim of this chapter is to discuss whether the adoption of these pre-emptive measures strengthen the security landscape of the Union. The chapter thus takes a closer look at how the Union strives to detect persons planning or preparing terrorist offences, and to hinder actual attacks from taking place. In particular, attention is paid to the EU’s police and judicial cooperation, general surveillance, the criminalisation of preparatory terrorist offences, and cooperation with third states and international organisations. A central objective is also to assess how the various counter-terrorism measures concur with international human rights law, including the Union’s legal framework on data protection.


Laws ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
Riaan Eksteen

Central to EU law and policies is the protection of human rights. For the European Union (EU), these rights are sacrosanct. Over the years, more substance to the protection of fundamental rights emerged. The European Court of Justice (ECJ) is notably entrusted with the protection of human rights and has always deemed it imperative that fundamental rights must be protected within the scope of EU law. The Court has always relied on strong European traditions and values and is guided by the inalienable principle of the rule of law. In the human rights record of the EU, the Kadi cases occupy a special place. The scope of the application of Article 46 is limited, and the application of the Charter is still not used to its full potential, and too few citizens are even aware of it. The Commission intends to present a strategy that would improve the use and awareness of the Charter. By the middle of 2020, the UK’s withdrawal from the EU had become acrimonious. One issue that still begs the conclusion is the status of and protection available to EU citizens living in the UK beyond 31 December 2020. These basic rights of its citizens are not negotiable for the EU.


2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 343-363
Author(s):  
Daria Davitti

Abstract This article focuses on the proportionality analysis carried out by international investment tribunals when the protection of foreign investment adversely impacts the protection of human rights. International investment arbitrators are increasingly called to adjudicate awards which require a ‘balancing’ between the so-called rights of investors, protected as they are by relevant international investment agreements (iia), and the rights of third parties affected by foreign investment. Such balancing often entails, at its core, a controversial juxtaposition between investment protections and human rights protections. In this article, I argue that a balancing between investors’ rights and human rights is neither possible nor desirable. This argument is crucial to demystify existing assumptions surrounding the use of balancing and proportionality in international investment arbitration as a way of successfully reconciling competing interests as well as conflicting protection obligations vested upon a host State.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gesa Kübek

The application and implications of the principle of autonomy for international investment agreements concluded by the Member States and the European Union (EU) has become a recurrent theme before the Court of Justice of the European Union. The decisions in Achmea and Opinion 1/17 show that autonomy unfolds differently in intra- and extra-EU investment relations and can only be preserved in the latter context. The present article examines this difference and, in light of Opinion 1/17 , seeks to explain how and why the autonomy of EU law can be preserved for international investment agreements through careful treaty design. In addition, it sheds some light on the practical consequences for the EU’s and the Member States’ external investment relations.


Refuge ◽  
2006 ◽  
pp. 81-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvie Da Lomba

The problematization of asylum has detrimentally impacted on the provision of support for asylum seekers in host countries. The threat of destitution has become instrumental in restrictive asylum policies and is increasingly used as a deterrent against asylum seeking. The EU experience reveals acute tensions between the EU asylum agenda and the EU Member States’ obligations under international refugee and human rights law. The provision of support for asylum seekers challenges narrow approaches to the realization of socio-economic rights for “others” and to host countries’ duties in that respect. The EU Reception Conditions Directive, which aims to set out standards for the reception of asylum seekers across the Union, exemplifies this predicament. Yet international refugee and human rights law provides a legal framework that establishes minimum standards critical to dignified living for asylum seekers and the protection of the right to seek refugee status in the EU and beyond.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-190
Author(s):  
Andrea Spagnolo

The present article addresses the issue of the loan of organs between international organizations, focusing on the most recent practice of the European Union (EU) and, in particular, on the loan of the Commission and the European Central Bank to the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). The hypothesis is that the loan of the two EU institutions to the ESM bridges two autonomous international organizations and that, for this reason, the EU can indirectly influence the activities of the ESM. The bridge is built on normative grounds, as EU institutions are bound to respect EU law even when they are borrowed by other international organizations, as the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) held in the Pringle case. In a more recent case, the Ledra Advertising, the same Court specified that the duty to respect EU law extends also to the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. This last consideration might have a positive impact on the protection of human rights in the context of austerity measures adopted by the ESM. Moreover, it might give to the EU an important tool for the enhancement of human rights protection in the relations with other international organizations. In this regard, the most recent practice of the EU reveals at the same time promises and perils.


2020 ◽  
pp. 144-180
Author(s):  
Marios Costa ◽  
Steve Peers

This chapter examines the development of the general principles by the Court of Justice (CJ) to support the protection of human rights in the European Union (EU) law within the scope of EU law. It analyses the relationship of the general principles derived from the CJ’s jurisprudence to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and the European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights (EUCFR), which includes substantive rights and procedural rights, as well as the principles of proportionality and legal certainty. It discusses the possible accession of the EU to the ECHR and the implications of Opinion 2/13. It suggests that although the protection of human rights has been more visible since the Lisbon Treaty and there are now more avenues to such protection, it is debatable whether the scope and level of protection has increased.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 457-483
Author(s):  
Sheng Zhang

Abstract Although an increasing number of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) now incorporate the concept of sustainable development, direct reference to human rights is still rare and remains embryonic. A close look at the positions held by some representative groups and countries, including the European Union (EU), the USA, China, India, South Africa, and Mercosur, reveals that the reference to human rights features divergence. The divided positions held by these groups or countries reveal the difficulties of operationalizing human rights obligations into international investment rule making. Even among developed countries or economies, a consistent approach to human rights is yet to be found. Based on these observations, this article proposes a number of pragmatic solutions to bridge the gap between these divided positions. In order to synergize international investment treaty regimes on human rights, internal engagement, including the reform of BIT dispute settlement regimes, and external engagement, including dialogues among stakeholders, should be made.


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