INTERNATIONAL
NORMS
AND STANDARDS RELATING TO DISABILITY
Part I. National Frameworks. 2/5
1. International Law and National Frameworks
This section explores the framework for the protection of rights of
persons with disabilities at the national level. This exploration covers the
adoption of international law into municipal law, the available mechanisms
under national law for the protection of violations of human rights and the
role of non-governmental organizations in monitoring the protection of the
rights of persons with disabilities.
In an effort to give legal recognition to normative rights, States follow
different practices in "internationalizing" treaty norms, that is, incorporating
treaties within the state's legal structure so that the provisions can be
implemented by state authorities.
International human rights law can have a great impact on national systems,
regardless of which of the two scenarios described above applies. National
courts may look at international and regional human rights norms in deciding how
to interpret and develop national law. International and regional human rights
law can be used in national human rights mechanisms in different ways including,
basing the human rights claim on international or regional law, where such law
is part of national law, or has otherwise been incorporated into national law;
using the international and regional human rights law as an aid to the
interpretation of national law provisions and using international human rights
law as the minimum standard of protection which national law should attain.
The next sections set out how and by what means or methods, international
human rights law and its implementation in national law has developed.
1.1 Sources of International Law:
Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice sets out
the following sources of international law: a) international conventions,
whether general or particular, establishing rules expressly recognized by
the contesting states; b) international custom, as evidence of a general
practice accepted as law; c) the general principles of law recognized by
civilized nations; d) judicial decisions and the teachings of the most
highly qualified publicists of the various nations as subsidiary means for
determination of rules of law.
1.2 The Role of Custom
Customary law is critical to the role of human rights law. The
domestic enforceability of customary international law is manifest in the
case of Filartiga v. Pena-Irala: "In the twentieth century the
international community has come to recognize the common danger posed by the
flagrant disregard of basic human rights … In the modern age, humanitarian
and practical considerations have combined to lead the nations of the world
to recognize that respect for fundamental human rights is in their
individual and collective interest…" (630 F. 2d 876, 89 ( 2d Cir.1980)). Two
issues were made clear by this case. Firstly, customary international law is
a matter of universal jurisdiction, so that any national courts may hear
extra-territorial claims brought under international law. Secondly, domestic
court may discover international legal principles by consulting executive,
legislative and judicial precedents, international agreements, the recorded
expertise of jurists and commentators, and other similar sources.
There also exists a class of customary international law, jus cogens,
that has peremptory force and cannot be abrogated by domestic law or treaty.
Jus cogens is generally deemed self-executing. When domestic courts apply
treaty law and other rights established by express accord, they usually look
to the language and legislative history of the norms involved to locate the
intent to enforce them locally. If such an intent exists, these agreements
are regarded as self-executing.
1.3 The Role of Treaties
Even though the sources of international law are not hierarchical,
treaties gain some degree of primacy among the sources of international law.
Treaties serve different purposes. Some treaties have far reaching political
impact such as peace settlements, alliances and nuclear testing bans. Others
though less political, involve relationships between governments or
government agencies and affect private parties. Most significantly, human
rights conventions have sought to extend protection to all persons against
governmental abuse. A treaty is formed by the express consent of its
parties. A treaty's text may permit some reservations, thus allowing a
greater number of States to enter into a treaty at the sacrifice of certain
objectives and purposes of the treaty.
1.4 International Law in Municipal Law
Even though international law requires a State to carry out its
international obligations, the processes used by a State to carry out its
international obligations will vary for example, from legislation, executive
and/ or judicial measures.
States also follow different practices in incorporating treaties within the
state's legal structure so that the provisions can be implemented by state
authorities. In some countries, international (and at times regional) human
rights law automatically becomes a part of national law. In other words, as soon
as a state has ratified or acceded to an international agreement, that
international law becomes national law. Under such systems treaties are
considered to be self-executing. In other countries, international human rights
law does not automatically form part of the national law of the ratifying state.
International law in these countries is not self-executing, that is, it does not
have the force of law without the passage of additional national legislation.
States incorporate treaties and norms into their domestic laws by specific
"transformational" devices. The automatic incorporation of ratified treaties by
constitutional provision, which has been called general transformation, mandates
domestic enforcement without legislative action beyond ratification. A second
method, special transformation, requires legislation in order to give treaties
domestic effect.
In the absence of special agreements, a State will decide how to carry out
its international obligations. For example, in the United States, the Federal
government will decide whether an agreement is to be self-executing or should
await implementation by legislation or appropriate executive or administrative
action.
In the United States unless a court deems a treaty to be self-executing, the
treaty will bind domestic courts only if Congress has passed legislation for the
specific purpose of implementing the treaty provisions domestically. Another
promising route for directly incorporating international human rights norms into
U.S. law is the argument that these norms are binding as customary international
law or jus cogens, a subset of customary laws that are so fundamental
that they are non derogable. The human rights values embodied in the U.N.
Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights are all elements of customary
international law that are rapidly establishing themselves as jus cogenss,
if they have not already achieved their status.
The case of Filartiga v. Pena Irala, heralded a trend
towards the domestic incorporation of customary international law. The
Filartiga court recognized that the law of nations is a dynamic
concept, which should be construed in accordance with the current
customs and usages of civilized nations, as articulated by jurists and
commentators. It held specifically that U.S. law directly incorporated
customary international law principles prohibiting deliberate
government torture. Moreover, in the most controversial aspect of its
opinion, the Filartiga court held that an old rarely invoked
federal jurisdictional statute, the Alien Tort Statute, created an
implied right of action for violations of customary international law.
In Paquete Habana (175 U.S. 677, 20 S.Ct.290), the Court
reaffirmed the domestic status of customary international law in the
United States. Relying on scholarly sources, the Court acknowledged a
long-held customary norm against seizing the coastal fishing vessels
of a belligerent. The court held that international law is part of the
United States law, and must be ascertained and administered and
administered by the courts of justice of appropriate jurisdiction as
often as questions of right depending upon it are duly presented for
their determination.
1.5 Locating Human Rights Law in Municipal Law
Any law that can be used to promote or protect human rights may be
considered to be part of human rights law. Human rights law can be found in
national constitutions, legislation and unwritten common law. National
constitutions increasingly reflect a commitment to human rights. At times
the rights are listed in a separate section generally known as a bill of
rights.
1.6 Two Basic Conceptions about Constitutions
A Constitution is a body of rules that establishes and regulates a
Government by laying down checks and balances and limitations of
governmental authority. Most constitutions also include a Bill of Rights.
These rules are sometimes justiciable in a court of laws and sometimes
merely aspirational and hortatory but no less effective in regulating
Government than the law stricto sensu. A second kind of constitution
is an unwritten constitution for example such as in England, New Zealand,
Canada and Israel. These countries have no written constitution in one
single document, but rather a number of Basic Laws, that are primary laws
guiding society. In the absence of a formal codified set of laws, tradition
and existing legal and political systems may provide enduring constitutional
principles.
If the rights of disabled persons have been recognised within the
Constitution, the political powers of the nation must respect them, as long as
the Constitution is not modified. There is, therefore, supremacy of
Constitutional Law over any other inconsistent law which voids any law or any
act of Government which violates the Constitution.
1.7 International Law and Municipal Law
Interface
An international treaty seldom stipulates how the States should implement
its provisions, leaving it to each State to decide how that obligation will
be executed on the domestic plane. One notable exception involves the right
of access and to effective remedies guaranteed in human rights treaties.
There is no rule of general international law that all treaties must have
effect in domestic law. Many treaties have no domestic legal
consequences and do not require implementation through the national legal
systems of the States Parties. The freedom to choose some methods of
implementation is also guaranteed in the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, article 2:
"Where not already provided for by existing legislative or other measures,
each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to take the necessary
steps, in accordance with its constitutional processes and with the
provisions of the present Covenant, to adopt such legislative or other
measures as may be necessary to give effect to the rights recognised in the
present Covenant." However, article 14 and 50 guarantee a right of access to
courts.
Four main methods are generally available for the implementation of
international human rights instruments in domestic law:
- Direct incorporation of rights recognised in the international
instruments into a bill of rights in the national legal order;
- Enactment of different legislative measures in the civil, criminal and
administrative laws to give effect to the different rights recognised in
human rights instruments;
- Self-executing operation of international human rights instruments in
the national legal order; and
- Indirect incorporation as aids to interpret other law.
For States that are not Parties to the relevant human rights treaties,
generally accepted standards of human rights are legally binding upon them
according to customary international law.
The relationship of international law to municipal law rests on two
principal schools of law. The dualists regard
international law and municipal law as separate and municipal law can
apply international law only when it has been incorporated into
municipal law. Incorporation can result from an act of parliament or
other political act, or given effect by the courts. On the other
hand, monists regard international law and municipal law as
parts of a single legal system. According to this theory, municipal
law is subservient to international law.
England is an example of the dualist model of international law. A
treaty has no effect in English domestic law, unless it is made part of it.
Once a treaty is incorporated into English Law, it is fully enforceable in
the courts. But the fact that a treaty is part of the English Law will not
necessarily mean that individuals have a cause of action arising from the
treaty. There will only be incorporation if the treaty changes domestic law,
or if it requires the raising of revenue or alteration of taxation. As in
the case of many treaties in the field of foreign relations, ratification is
a formality and incorporation is not required. An unincorporated
treaty has no formal standing in English Law. If it conflicts with statute
or common law, the latter will prevail. An incorporated treaty becomes part
of the law of the land, but it has no special position. The relationship
between incorporated treaties and other legislation is the same as the
relationship of two statutes to each other. Parliament is supreme in the
sense that it can pass legislation that is inconsistent with any
international treaty obligations which, nevertheless binds the United
Kingdom at the international level.
An example of a monist model is the Netherlands legal system.
For the operation of treaties and the orders of international organizations
within the legal system, no national order is required to convert
international law into national law. International law operates
automatically, as such, within the national legal system. Therefore, certain
treaties are considered constitutional law where they limit or extend the
powers of Dutch offices based on national constitutional law. Examples of
this are the
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Finally, between these two models there are a number of variants;
however, many of them are only theoretical constructions. In the United
States, for instance, treaties are expressly supreme law of the land and can
be self-operative, creating individual rights and duties in domestic legal
processes.
In the United States, ratified human rights treaties and customary
international law are both law of the land. The Supremacy Clause of the
United States Constitution makes all Treaties made or which shall be made
under the Authority of the United States… the "Supreme Law of the Land"
(U.S. Const.art. VI Cl. 2). Under the Supremacy Clause, the law of the land
is binding on the federal government as well as on state and local
governments. According to the U.S. Supreme Court, the treaty power
authorizes Congress to legislate under the Necessary and Proper Clause in
areas beyond those specifically conferred on Congress (Missouri v. Holland
252 U.S. 416 (1920)).
In the U.S. not all treaties, by their terms, mandate domestic
applications that affect private parties. Such treaties, therefore, are not
self-executing, even though they are ratified and are part of the law of the
land according to the Supremacy Clause. Since a private right is largely
contingent on the existence of a right of action, additional legislation is
needed to grant individuals private rights pursuant to such treaties.
Self-executing treaty doctrine stipulates that not even the few U.S.
ratified human rights treaties would necessarily be binding on domestic
courts. Unless a court deems a treaty to be self-executing, the treaty will
bind domestic courts only if Congress has passed legislation for the
specific purpose of implementing the treaty provisions domestically.
While the U.S. Constitution assigns the power to make and adopt
treaties to the federal government, several state and local
governments have adopted human rights treaties. For example, in the
absence of federal ratification on the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), San Francisco
has incorporated principles of CEDAW into binding local law.
In order to achieve an effective improvement in the exercise of disabled
persons human rights, it is important to understand the mechanisms that
exist and the remedies they can provide. Much of this Resource
addresses the potential of human rights mechanisms in this context.
Before analysing the available international instruments in the area of
disability, an examination of the procedure and remedies provided by the
national level will be made.
1.8 The Role of the Constitution in Municipal Law
National constitutions increasingly reflect a commitment to human rights.
At times the rights are listed in a separate section generally known as a
bill of rights. Drafters of recent constitutions often consider
the language of international and regional norms in fashioning their
guarantees. Some of the possible constitutional provisions that affect human
rights are:
- Right to non-discrimination
- Right to equal treatment in specified spheres, such as employment or
the court system, or in all spheres of life
- Right to freedom from violence
- Other civil and political rights available to people including, for
example, the right to assembly, to free speech, to worship as one chooses,
to privacy etc.
- Other economic and social rights available to all people, including
for example, the right to health care, housing and education
1.9 The Supremacy of the Constitution
The Constitution is said to be the supreme law of the land (For explicit
claims, see inter alia, the Constitution of Australia, Preamble; the
Canadian Constitution Act, 1982, Art.552; the Constitution of Italy, Art.1;
the Constitution of Ireland, Art.6; the Constitution of Japan, Art. 98; and
the Constitution of the United States, Art. 6. For implicit claims, see
inter alia, the Constitution of India, Arts. 251 and 254; the Basic Law of
Federal Republic of Germany, Arts. 20 (3), 23,28 (1) and (3), 37, 56, 64(2),
70, 87 a(2), 98(2), and 142). The Constitution is the source of all
political power within the nation.
The logical consequence of the superiority of the Constitution is that
all acts of the legislature, repugnant to the Constitution will be void.
Therefore, these acts will not bind either the courts or the citizens. The
constitutionality of every law and every act of the Government is one of the
most important political principles of democracies and universally accepted
rule of law norms. Consequently, including the civil rights of persons with
disabilities within the Constitution seems to be the most effective way in
which to protect their human rights and fundamental freedoms of persons with
disabilities.
1.10 Judicial Review of Legislation
The right of a constitutional court or the highest court of the land to
declare certain laws unconstitutional is termed the power of judicial
review.
The very essence of civil liberty consists of the right of every
individual to claim the protection of the laws, whenever one receives an
injury; one of the main duties of government is to protect the rights of all
persons. Access to courts and the right to an effective remedy are
fundamental rights included in article 8 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles 2 and 14 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
A successful rights claim may have wider impact and lead to the reform of
legislation or policies found to violate the rights of persons with
disabilities. Advocates can thus take test cases or impact litigation
cases to court to challenge policies or laws, which discriminate against
disabled persons.
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