I. INTRODUCTION
The principle of systemic integration is being expounded as the answer to certain difficulties arising from the fragmentation of public international law. International lawyers and judges contemplate and discuss systemic integration without, however, explaining the application of this principle of interpretation to legal reasoning. This article makes two arguments: First, the uncritical application of systemic integration raises serious interpretational and jurisdictional concerns. Second, systemic integration does not necessarily yield the results hoped for, but may instead create unwarranted jurisdictional powers among international courts and give rise to a poorer and less diverse international law.
The article focuses on the application of systemic integration of treaties in the area of human rights. Although the function of systemic integration has been explored across different functional regimes (eg trade law and investment law),Footnote 1 not much has been written concerning its application in the context of human rights. The article discusses the application of systemic integration in the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR) and the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACtHPR) and draws lessons for the development of human rights law and international law more generally. International human rights courts are particularly inclined to apply this principle of interpretation. Although human rights treaties are not inherently different from other treaties, they are often drafted in a distinctive, open-textured manner which makes them particularly appropriate for further development through interpretation. Moreover, international courts of human rights engage with international law questions, including interpretive issues, on a regular basis and are therefore likely to reflect on and refine their approaches in a more systematic way than other international courts.Footnote 2 As a result, the case law of these courts should provide useful insights into the difficulties arising from the application of systemic integration and allow for generally applicable lessons to be learned. Finally, human rights regimes often take innovative approaches towards the articulation of interests in international law. Systemic integration is used as the interpretive means (and justification) by which international courts engage in this exercise. This article considers the rarely discussed implications of this for the progressive development of international law.
The question of the fragmentation of international law has attracted considerable attention over the last decade. The diversification and expansion of the scope of international law, and the proliferation of international bodies exercising judicial and quasi-judicial functions, have increased the likelihood of conflicting or diverging interpretations of similar or identical rules.Footnote 3 Careful interpretation is considered to be the main way of minimizing such difficulties.Footnote 4 A treaty is to be construed, as far as possible, consistently with other rules of public international law. Article 31(3)(c) Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) is of interest in this regard, since it specifically requires that a treaty shall be interpreted by taking into account any relevant rules of international law applicable to the relations between the parties.Footnote 5
The fragmentation of international law, however, is not only about the risk of international courts taking divergent approaches to a particular problem. An equally important concern is that, due to jurisdictional constraints, international courts are unable to fully engage with, and thus respond holistically and effectively to, global legal problems. International courts decide the cases brought before them in a ‘piecemeal’ fashion by ‘squeezing’Footnote 6 or reducing the dispute to fit the court's competence.Footnote 7 An international court is competent to decide a case only insofar as the subject matter of the dispute falls within the scope of the treaty which grants it jurisdiction.Footnote 8 Not all of the relevant legal aspects of a case will be heard by any one international court, since these courts are only able to decide disputes to the extent that they fall within its jurisdiction and only according to the applicable law.Footnote 9 The widening and enrichment of public international law, coupled with the proliferation of international bodies, has emphasized these disparities in public international law. Similar or even identical rights and obligations under different treaties retain their separate existence, notwithstanding the treaties’ respective contexts, objects and purposes, or the subsequent practice of the parties.Footnote 10 It is an inherent feature of any international court's judicial function that it decides cases brought before it using the lens of the jurisdiction it possesses.
Against this background, systemic integration is being presented not only as a means of avoiding dissonant interpretations and/or judgments, but also as a remedy for the ‘piecemeal’ judicial functioning of international courts. The International Law Commission (ILC), in its work to remedy the fragmentation problem, is leading the way in asserting that systemic integration should be the process whereby international treaty obligations are interpreted by reference to their normative environment, so that, as a consequence, treaties function as parts of a coherent and meaningful whole. In this sense, systemic integration goes further than simply affirming the applicability of general international law to the interpretation of treaties. It specifically points to the need to interpret one treaty by reference to another treaty, with t he objective of ‘connect[ing] the separate treaty provisions … as aspects of an overall aggregate of the rights and obligations of the States’.Footnote 11 This is arguably the most obscure aspect of the push for systemic integration. Whereas, in general, taking other treaties into account when interpreting a treaty is part of the international lawyer's mindset and enhances consistency in international law,Footnote 12 it is unclear what it means to set the objective of systemically integrating one treaty into another in order to achieve ‘a sense of coherence and meaningfulness’.Footnote 13 Many scholars have endorsed the ILC's approach, however, suggesting that Article 31(3)(c) VCLT may be taken to express the principle of systemic integration.Footnote 14
This article's starting point is that the principle of systemic integration should not be equated to the language of Article 31(3)(c) VCLT. It argues that the principle of systemic integrationFootnote 15 —either allegedly derived from Article 31(3)(c) VCLT or as a stand-alone principle—cannot remedy the international courts’ fragmented lens.Footnote 16 The purpose of interpretation is not to integrate treaties into a coherent whole, but to introduce into the process of interpreting a treaty any relevant rules and to offer interpretive guidance (Article 31(3)(c) VCLT being one tool for accomplishing this).Footnote 17 Part II of the article demonstrates that the application of systemic integration in many cases finds its place outside the realm of interpretation and that the principle raises serious jurisdictional concerns regarding the mandate of international courts. The crucial questions in legal reasoning with regard to pursuing systemic integration concern the degree to which other treaties will be relevant and the weight that will be attached to them in informing the interpretation of a given treaty.Footnote 18
Part III explores the reasons why systemic integration of treaties falls short of the expectations of international lawyers. It submits that the principle is still shaped by—and may reinforce—existing institutional preferences and biases, and that it cannot serve as a tool for prioritizing important concerns. Furthermore, systemic integration in human rights law does not necessarily always benefit the inherent diversity that characterizes international law; on the contrary, it may hinder its progressive development. In an effort to create coherence, there is a risk of reducing the existing or potential reach of international law to the restricted vocabulary and structure of the human rights paradigm. Systemic integration fuels the phenomenon of international judicial bodies exercising undue interpretive authority over treaties other than those under their jurisdiction, as well as raising the possibility of the emergence of new, perhaps unwarranted, informal jurisdictional powers in international courts. The analysis concludes that, despite the appealing nature of the principle of systemic integration, international courts and bodies should exercise caution in applying it.
II. INTERPRETATIONAL AND JURISDICTIONAL CONCERNS
This part of the article highlights the limitations of applying the principle of systemic integration when interpreting a given treaty. Three principal issues arise when the interpreter loses sight of the appropriate weight that should be attached to other treaties in the construction of the treaty being analysed. First, systemic integration of treaties may lead the interpreter to disregard the textual limits of the treaty under interpretation. Second, it can aggravate the risk of downplaying the different contextual nuances of different treaties. Third, uncritically employing systemic integration may result in the indirect application of and supervision over other treaties under the guise of interpretation, thereby raising serious implications for a court's mandate and legitimacy.
A. Disregarding the Textual Limits of the Treaty under Interpretation
As is the case with any interpretive principle, application of the principle of systemic integration is limited by the explicit language of the treaty under interpretation.Footnote 19 The weight accorded to provisions from other treaties in the construction of the treaty at issue cannot lead to an interpretation that goes beyond the plain meaning of the treaty's text. There have been cases, however, in which reliance upon other treaties has driven an interpretation that distorts the language of a human rights treaty.
In the Zolotukhin case, the applicant alleged a violation of Article Four of Additional Protocol Seven (Article 4 of AP 7) to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR),Footnote 20 complaining that he had been prosecuted twice for the same offence.Footnote 21 Article 4 of AP 7 reads:
No one shall be liable to be tried or punished again in criminal proceedings under the jurisdiction of the same State for an offence for which he has already been finally acquitted or convicted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of the State.
The Grand Chamber of the ECtHR held that the term ‘offence’ should be understood by reference to the legal classifications under national law. Hence, if an act was classified as constituting two distinct criminal offences under national law, the prohibitions of Article 4 of AP 7 would not apply. The Grand Chamber analysed the definition of the term ‘offence’ by referring to similar provisions in other treaties containing formulations of the ne bis in idem principle. Reference was made to the pertinent provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR);Footnote 22 the Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC Statute);Footnote 23 the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (EU Charter);Footnote 24 the Convention Implementing the Schengen Agreement;Footnote 25 and the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights (IACHR).Footnote 26 Article 14(7) ICCPR and Article 50 EU Charter contain the term ‘offence’, Article 8(4) IACHR refers to ‘cause’, Article 54 of the Schengen Agreement mentions ‘acts’ and Article 20(1) ICC Statute refers to ‘conduct’. The Court emphasized that the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) and the IACtHR followed the most favourable approach to the applicant and that, for this reason, it could not ‘justify adhering to a more restrictive approach’.Footnote 27 The Grand Chamber unanimously overruled its previous case law and dramatically altered the scope of applicability of Article 4 AP 7.
The driving force behind the Court's reasoning was its construction of the ECHR in light of other treaties and the Court's decision to base its ruling on the jurisprudence of other international courts. The Court's reliance on the jurisprudence of the CJEU and the IACtHR in order to reach the most favourable interpretation for the applicant is ill-founded. This is because the rulings of these two international courts were interpreting the Schengen Agreement and the IACHR, respectively, which frame the ne bis in idem prohibition in broader terms than the ECHR does.Footnote 28 The ECtHR thus relied upon an interpretation of the Schengen Agreement and the IACHR to arrive at a broad definition of the specific, restricted term ‘offence’ contained in Article 4 of AP 7. The Grand Chamber afforded such great weight to these treaties and their interpretation by other courts that it effectively disregarded the textual limits of the ECHR. It is doubtful whether, as has been argued, the judgment in Zolotukhin is a positive example of constructive dialogue among international courts.Footnote 29 In the Mamatkulov and Askarov and Scoppola cases, the Grand Chamber overruled its previous jurisprudence in a similar fashion by disregarding the limitations of the language in the ECHR.Footnote 30
Likewise, the IACtHR in Artavia Murillo et al.—a case concerning in vitro fertilization and the question of whether Article 4 IACHR protects the right to life of an embryo—construed the IACHR in a manner contrary to its letter. Even though Article 4(1) provides that ‘[the right to life] shall be protected by law and, in general, from the moment of conception’, the Court ruled that an embryo cannot be understood to be a person for the purposes of Article 4.Footnote 31 In reaching this conclusion, the Court emphasized that trends in international law do not support the position that an embryo should be treated as a person, or that it has a right to life.Footnote 32 The Court conducted its interpretation of the IACHR by referring to other treaties and instruments, as well as the views of human rights bodies,Footnote 33 including the Universal Declaration on Human Rights;Footnote 34 the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW)Footnote 35 and the views of the CEDAW Committee; the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC);Footnote 36 the ICCPR and the views of the Human Rights Committee (HRC) which monitors the implementation of the ICCPR; the African Charter on Human and People's Rights (ACHPR);Footnote 37 and, finally, the ECHR and the case law of the ECtHR. This was, however, an inappropriate application of systemic integration, not only because many of these treaties do not bind the member States to the IACHR,Footnote 38 but also, most importantly, because none of these treaties explicitly protects unborn life. Article 4 IACHR is a unique formulation of the right to life in international human rights law and, hence, it is questionable how far other more general treaties and instruments shed light on its interpretation. The problems in the Court's reasoning can be illustrated by its reference to the Vo. v France case, in which the ECtHR stated that:
[U]nlike Article 4 of the American Convention on Human Rights, which provides that the right to life must be protected ‘in general, from the moment of conception’, Article 2 of the Convention [ECHR] is silent as to the temporal limitations of the right to life […].Footnote 39
Most international human rights treaties are able to accommodate change over time because of their vaguely drafted text, which affords considerable leeway to the interpreter. Yet, the interpreter cannot properly pursue a construction of a treaty that amounts to a revision of its text.Footnote 40 In the cases discussed above, the ECtHR and the IACtHR seem to have crossed that line.
B. Duly Appreciating the Contextual Nuances between Different Treaties?
International courts and other international bodies have developed an extensive case law establishing synergies and links between the treaty under their jurisdiction and other treaties. These synergies and links are welcome, and are attuned to the goal of pursuing coherence in international law. Nonetheless, taking account of norms in other treaties that are similar or identical to those in the treaty under interpretation should be subject to pertinent contextual nuances pertaining to the purpose, function and aims of the other treaty provisions.Footnote 41 In order for the interpreter to ascertain and give due regard to such nuances, he or she needs not only to identify the core of similarity among equivalentFootnote 42 treaty provisions but also to appreciate the differences between them. The question is, therefore, whether international courts meaningfully engage with other treaties so as to value the different contexts from which provisions in these treaties originate. It is important that the international judge examines and explains how the other treaty is relevant and, accordingly, how it informs the proper construction of the treaty being interpreted. This section argues that such nuances are easily disregarded.
The Van der Mussele and Siliadin cases exemplify how the ECtHR should give consideration to other treaties while still preserving the particular language and purpose of the ECHR.Footnote 43 In Van der Mussele, the applicant alleged a violation of the prohibition on ‘forced or compulsory labour’ under Article 4(2) ECHR. In its analysis, the Plenary Court referred to both the 1932 International Labour Organization (ILO) Convention Concerning Forced or Compulsory Labour (ILO Convention No 29)Footnote 44 and the 1959 ILO Convention on the Abolition of Forced Labour.Footnote 45 The definition of ‘forced or compulsory labour’ contained in ILO Convention No 29 and the standards adopted by the ILO Committee of ExpertsFootnote 46 informed the Court's construction of Article 4 ECHR. The Court stressed that the ILO Convention would provide the ‘starting point for the interpretation of Article 4’,Footnote 47 but that ‘sight should not be lost of [the European] Convention's special features’.Footnote 48 The question whether the applicant unwillingly offered his services was not assessed against the ILO approach to the meaning of consent,Footnote 49 but rather against the structure and aims of Article 4 ECHR. Hence, the ECtHR neither unqualifiedly relied on, nor did it integrate, ILO Convention No 29. Likewise, in the Siliadin case, the ECtHR recognized the definition in ILO Convention No 29 of ‘forced or compulsory labour’, according to which the work or service must be extracted from an individual under the menace of penalty. Although the applicant in the circumstances of the case had not been threatened by a penalty, the Court found that she was in an equivalent situation due to her vulnerable position.Footnote 50 In this way, the Court, in light of the specific facts, equated the ILO standard of being threatened by a menace of penalty to perceiving to be threatened by a penalty.
In contrast, in other instances the ECtHR has drawn interpretive guidance from other treaties while ignoring contextual differences, uncritically transposing the detailed standards of other treaties into the provisions of the ECHR. In the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers case, the Court held that the Convention protects sympathy strikes. It referred to a series of international treaties and views of international bodies in its legal reasoning, but it failed to examine exactly how the norms of these treaties were relevant or how they aided in the interpretation of Article 11 ECHR.Footnote 51 The Court stressed that the ILO Committee of Experts and the ILO Committee on Freedom of Association had supported the position that a general prohibition on sympathy strikes violates the right to strike, even though these bodies simply mentioned that a general ban could lead to abuse in light of the specific circumstances.Footnote 52 Further, the restrictions on the right to strike in the EU Charter were not sufficiently addressed. Finally, the Court relied heavily upon Article 6 of the European Social Charter (ESC),Footnote 53 without acknowledging that most of Article 6's undertakings are optional and that ten European States have chosen not to guarantee the right to strike under the ESC.
The expansive interpretation of the ECHR given in the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers case follows the Court's approach in the area of socio-economic rights. In Demir and Baykara, the Grand Chamber accepted that the right of public officials to form and join a trade union and to bargain collectively has become one of the essential elements of Article 11 ECHR.Footnote 54 This judgment also paved the way for recognizing the right to strike and the right to collective action under Article 11.Footnote 55 The legal reasoning in both National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers and Demir and Baykara was grounded in the consideration of ILO Conventions and the ESC and their progressive development by their respective monitoring bodies. The judgments share the same methodology: namely, discerning an alleged analytical common denominator by reference to a great variety of treaties. One could argue that this so-called integrated approach to the interpretation of the ECHR seeks to integrate socio-economic rights into individual and political rights, and that it is founded upon the ideas of cross-fertilization between and convergence among different treaties.Footnote 56 Yet cross-fertilization and convergence of treaty norms cannot justify transplanting detailed provisions of other treaties into the scope of the ECHR without considering the relevant context of the other treaties.
Another example demonstrating how the ECtHR pursues systemic integration by ignoring crucial contextual differences is the Opuz case. Because, under certain Turkish legislation, perpetrators of domestic violence could not be prosecuted if the victim withdrew her complaint, the applicant claimed a breach of Article 2 ECHR due to the legislation's lack of a deterrent effect. Despite the clear absence of consensus among Member States on this matter, the Court ruled that States have a positive obligation under the ECHR to establish and effectively apply a system punishing all forms of domestic violence, and to provide sufficient safeguards for victims.Footnote 57 This conclusion was reached by invoking the standard of due diligence as a yardstick for assessing State responsibility in the context of violence against women.Footnote 58 In the process of finding an analytical common denominator between the ECHR and a series of other treaties, the ECtHR made the mistake of detaching the different variants of the due diligence standard from the contexts of these other treaties. More specifically, the Court drew upon General Recommendation 19 issued by the CEDAW Committee and the Committee's views as expressed in individual communications, including its views as stated in the A.T. v Hungary case.Footnote 59 A careful reading of A.T. reveals, however, that the CEDAW Committee did not explicitly mention a failure to exercise due diligence.Footnote 60 The ECtHR in Opuz devoted special attention to the Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women (Belem Convention), which was the only treaty in force (at the time) addressing violence against women,Footnote 61 and the related practice of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACmHR). In the Maria Da Penha v Brazil case, the IACmHR held that States must exercise due diligence by deterring and investigating domestic violence incidents.Footnote 62 The ECtHR, however, did not acknowledge that the IACmHR employed the due diligence standard in Maria Da Penha v Brazil by asserting jurisdiction over and applying the specialized Belem Convention (and not the IACHR).Footnote 63
In Lohe Issa Konate v Burkina Faso, the question before the ACtHPR was whether the harsh criminal penalties levied by Burkina Faso against the applicant for defamation represented a disproportionate interference with his right to freedom of expression under the ACHPR.Footnote 64 A specific feature of the right to freedom of expression under ACHPR and other rights contained in the ACHPR, is that they are subject to so-called clawback clauses.Footnote 65 For example, Article 9(2) provides: ‘Every individual shall have the right to express and disseminate his opinions within the law’ (emphasis added). The idea behind subjecting the right of freedom of expression to the limits of domestic law is to preserve the rights of Member States. The Court, however, held that the phrase ‘within the law’ must be interpreted with reference to international standards.Footnote 66 It based its reasoning on its consideration of Article 19 ICCPR, the views of the HRC and the practice of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACmHPR).Footnote 67 Although this is, in principle, a welcome development in the context of a growing convergence among international courts when interpreting limitation and clawback clauses,Footnote 68 it is not entirely clear to what extent other treaties may be used in this process of interpretation. The ICCPR, the IACHR and the ECHR do not contain similar clauses and, therefore, one might question whether they can be used to ‘neutralize’ these clauses in the ACHPR. In fact, the only other human rights treaty which includes clawback clauses applicable to many of the rights specified in the ACHPR is the Revised Arab Charter,Footnote 69 but the ACtHPR made no mention of it. The vice president of the Court, in a separate opinion issued in another case, pointed out this problematic issue, but concluded, with no further explanation, that the ACHPR should be interpreted in the same spirit as the ICCPR.Footnote 70
Typically, the IACtHR does not discuss contextual differences between treaties. The ECtHR is more mindful of these, although many pertinent issues are still not sufficiently addressed. To summarize, the principle of systemic integration should not be relied on as the legal tool for an unwarranted alignment of a treaty's meaning with the content of other treaties. After all, it is the task of human rights treaties to establish minimum standards for creating a selected catalogue of rights. In many instances, the ECtHR unfortunately follows an ambitious integrative and harmonizing interpretation of the ECHR with regard to other treaties to such an extent that it raises questions about the boundary between interpreting and rewriting the ECHR. The goal of lessening fragmentation does not justify an excessive striving for uniformity. International courts can and should articulate different approaches and interpretations among treaties, if such articulations are dictated by different treaty contexts.Footnote 71 The ECtHR's great receptiveness to other treaties is, however, not always accompanied by a rigorous examination of how these treaties are relevant to the ECHR.
Other international bodies pursue a more robust analysis of whether a rule of international law is relevant to the treaty under interpretation. The Appellate Body of the WTO, in the Measures Affecting Trade in Large Civil Aircraft dispute, scrutinized in detail the extent to which other international treaties were related to the issues under dispute.Footnote 72 It found that the provisions of the 1992 Agreement between the EU and the USA concerning the application of the 1979 GATT Agreement on Trade in Civil Aircraft were not relevant to determining the meaning of ‘benefit’ under Article 1.1(b) of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures.Footnote 73 The International Court of Justice (ICJ), in the Questions of Mutual Assistance case, accepted that the 1977 Treaty of Friendship and Co-operation Between France and Djibouti had ‘some bearing’Footnote 74 on the proper interpretation of the 1986 Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters, although it did not elaborate further. The discussions in these cases show that there is room for improvement, which should be the goal of international human rights courts.
C. Indirectly Applying and Supervising Other Treaties
A concern when applying the principle of systemic integration (or Article 31(3)(c) VCLT with the objective of systemic integration) is the risk of conflating the use of a treaty for the purpose of interpretation and the de facto application of that treaty.Footnote 75 Systemic integration may lead not only to transposing the detailed standards of one treaty into the scope of a human rights treaty, but also to indirectly applying and supervising these standards under the pretext of interpretation. This, in turn, stretches—if not contravenes—the limited ratione materiae jurisdiction of an international human rights court.Footnote 76 As will be discussed, both the IACtHR and the ECtHR tend to discern a common denominator in the various potentially relevant treaties by reading them together and subsequently integrating this denominator into the scope of the IACHR and the ECHR, respectively. The ECtHR articulates this practice mostly in terms of a European consensus; the IACHR explains it in terms of the international corpus juris, positing that a comprehensive and integrative reading of the IACHR alongside other treaties is justified on multiple grounds, including the pro homine principle, Article 29(b) IACHR and Article 31(3)(c) VCLT.Footnote 77
The Taşkin and Tătar judgments marked a discernible shift in the ECtHR's interpretation of the ECHR with respect to its willingness to look to potentially relevant environmental protection treaties.Footnote 78 This consideration of environment-related norms took the form of fully integrating detailed obligations under the Aarhus Convention relating to access to information, public participation in decision-making and access to justice into the positive obligations of Article 8 ECHR. In effect, the Court provided for indirect environment-related procedural rights and assessed Member States’ acts and omissions against these standards.Footnote 79 In a different series of cases concerning children's rights, the principle of systemic integration, Article 31(3) VCLT and the international corpus juris for the protection of children served as the bases for the IACtHR to determine that the content of Article 19 IACHR by incorporating provisions of the CRC.Footnote 80 Although the Court stated that the CRC merely sheds light on Article 19 IACHR, the judgment does in fact integrate detailed requirements of the CRC.Footnote 81
Even more striking is the ECtHR's practice with respect to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (Hague Convention).Footnote 82 Systemic integration provided the means for the Court to transplant technical provisions of the Hague Convention into Article 8 ECHR. In addition to this, the Court held that any weakening of the Hague Convention's guarantees reduces protections under the ECHR.Footnote 83 The failure of national authorities to meet the six-week requirement to reach a decision on the expeditious return of an abducted child (Article 11 of the Hague Convention), or to diligently enforce this decision, automatically gives rise to a violation of Article 8 ECHR.Footnote 84 In this way, the Court effectively supervised the implementation of the Hague Convention under the guise of interpreting the ECHR.Footnote 85
International courts have gone so far as to pronounce on Member States’ failures to honour and implement other treaties. In Carlson, Switzerland's actions were ‘not in accordance with Article 11 of the Hague Convention’.Footnote 86 In Fornerón and Daughter, the IACtHR found that the fact that Argentina did not specifically criminalize the sale of a child in its domestic law ‘does not satisfy the provisions of Article 35 [CRC]’Footnote 87 and is contrary to its obligations under the Optional Protocol of the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of Children, Child Prosecution and Child Pornography.Footnote 88 In Rantsev, the ECtHR found a procedural violation of the right to life because Cyprus had failed to make use of the procedures provided for in a Mutual Legal Assistance Convention.Footnote 89 The IACtHR decided that the States’ failure to enact relevant extradition treaties was in violation of their obligations under the right to a fair trial and the right to judicial protection to prosecute and punish those responsible for serious human rights violations.Footnote 90 In other words, according to the Court, the IACHR specifically requires Member States to conclude extradition agreements.
Turning to another area of law, in Gonzales Lluy the IACtHR addressed the right to health.Footnote 91 Notwithstanding the fact that the IACHR does not provide for the right to health and Article 26 IACHR contains only a commitment to progressive development of access to rights rather than a recognition of socio-economic rights,Footnote 92 the Court decided to uphold the right to health by linking it to the right to personal integrity and the right to life. In particular, the Court read into the scope of the right to personal integrity the State's obligation to regulate, monitor and supervise the services provided by private healthcare centres.Footnote 93 This link was articulated in light of the interdependence and indivisibility of civil and political rights on the one hand and economic, social and cultural rights on the other—and by taking into consideration a series of international treaties and documents, including the Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,Footnote 94 the CRC and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).Footnote 95 The ICESCR Committee's General Comments articulating a detailed framework for the requirements of availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of all health services, goods and facilities served as the Court's standard for assessing Ecuador's obligations under the IACHR.Footnote 96 The Court was divided, with the point of disagreement among the judges being the scope and nature of Article 26 IACHR and, accordingly, the question of whether the right to health should become justiciable under Article 26 or under the rights to life and personal integrity.Footnote 97 The president of the Court submitted an insightful concurring opinion, arguing that, if one were to define the entire content and scope of a right by means of other treaties, this would result in a modification of the IACHR and a delegitimization of the Court.Footnote 98 What was not addressed, however, was the question of why these concerns are not equally applicable when detailed soft-law and hard-law standards pertaining to the right to health are fully incorporated into an analysis of the right to personal integrity.
From the cases discussed, it follows that, although both the ECtHR and the IACtHR argue that other treaties and instruments may be used as interpretive references in their reasoning, in practice they have sometimes transplanted external standards into the scope of their constitutive instruments. Specific application of systemic integration has resulted, in many instances, in the indirect application of other treaties under the pretext of interpretation. States may provide different levels of protection for the same rights in different international treaties, or even strategically create divergences or conflicts among treaties.Footnote 99 This does not mean that international judges have the competence to resolve such divergences or conflicts, or to align the content of one treaty with another. In some other cases, courts have effectively supervised other treaties.Footnote 100 This practice stretches their mandate too far and circumvents the consent of States that have not ratified these treaties by imposing on them obligations that they have not assumed. Even when some or all Member States have ratified these treaties, they have not consented to court supervision of their implementation. Establishing the content and meaning of the rights provided for under the ECHR and the IACHR by reading into them not only detailed external obligations, but also arguably new rights, crosses the line between interpreting and modifying human rights treaties.Footnote 101
III. SYSTEMIC INTEGRATION: FALLING SHORT OF EXPECTATIONS
Having discussed certain doctrinal (interpretational and jurisdictional) issues that arise when systemic integration is applied, this part of the article explores the broader implications of applying systemic integration within the human rights arena. Systemic integration falls short of the expectations of international lawyers for reasons which are rarely addressed. The first section highlights the fact that application of the principle of systemic integration is subject to the institutional and policy preferences of international courts and, hence, there are inherent limitations to pursuing a uniform or consistent interpretation of human rights law. The second section discusses the argument that systemic integration has the potential to establish priorities among important concerns, rather than simply resolving treaty conflicts. The case law of the ECtHR reveals that when this takes place, it may upset the aims and structure of the treaty under interpretation. The third section questions the well-established presumption that the more receptive an international court is to other treaties, and the more systemically it integrates them in its reasoning, the more effectively it ameliorates fragmentation.Footnote 102 The analysis discusses the risk that international courts may exercise undue interpretive authority over other treaties, thereby leading to the emergence of new informal jurisdictional powers residing in international courts. The final section argues that systemic integration in the human rights regime may hinder the progressive development of other interests and concerns in international law and cause our imaginative space to become stagnant, preventing us from looking beyond the present human rights regime(s).
A. Systemic Integration Is Shaped by Institutional Preferences
Application of the principle of systemic integration does not escape the functional biases and preferences of international courts. This application is affected by the legal and institutional aspects of fragmentation that it purports to overcome in the first place. Interpretation is, therefore, an invaluable yet limited tool for international lawyers and judges.
The debates in the literature usually revolve around the question of whether the introduction of relevant treaties in the process of interpretation could promote, for example, an investment arbitration tribunal or a WTO Panel being receptive to human rights law and, hence, form the basis of a holistic construction over different areas of law.Footnote 103 An interesting exercise that demonstrates the intrinsic difficulties involved is to adopt a narrower frame of reference and explore how international courts in the same area of law are restricted not only by the mandate defined by their subject areas (eg human rights, trade) but also by their own judicial policies and preferences. Systemic integration as a policy goal and/or interpretive tool does not necessarily avoid these preferences and biases, nor does it bring coherence to specific areas of public international law—let alone to international law as a whole.
As an example, the IACtHR and the ECtHR are not equally willing to take into account the rights of indigenous peoples when interpreting the IACHR and the ECHR, respectively. The IACtHR has enlarged the scope of Article 21 IACHR by reading into it a collective understanding of the right to property (in accordance with Article 13 of ILO Convention No 169) in the context of the duty of State parties to respect the special relationship that indigenous peoples develop with the lands they occupy or use.Footnote 104 According to this Court, a comprehensive and integrative reading of the IACHR alongside other treaties is required in order to promote the uniform interpretation of international human rights law.Footnote 105 This ‘effort of normative integration’Footnote 106 serves the aim of incorporating the indigenous world view into human rights.Footnote 107 However, the ECtHR does not share the same degree of sympathy for indigenous peoples’ rights. In the Handölsdalen Sami Village case, the Court did not address how the rights of indigenous peoples and treaties relevant to those rights might inform interpretation of the ECHR.Footnote 108 This point demonstrates not only the different approaches taken by the courts, but also the selectiveness underlying the application of systemic integration. The IACtHR uses systemic integration and the pro homine principle to construe the corpus juris of international human rights law in favour of serving specific judicial policy goals in the Latin American region.Footnote 109 Consequently, any claim for a uniform interpretation of human rights or use of integration is subject to (and even reinforces) existing biases and judicial policies. In addition, institutional preferences and structural biases permeate human rights expertise from within, since human rights lawyers may regard themselves as experts in very specific areas (for example, children's or anti-discrimination lawyers) and, therefore, may adopt opposing perspectives and priorities.Footnote 110 These preferences and biases existing at the level of institutions, judicial policy and expertise are entrenched in the practice of human rights law, and, at the very least, one should be aware of them.
B. Prioritizing Concerns beyond Treaty Conflicts?
The principle of systemic integration holds a prominent position in discussions of treaty (or norm) conflicts. Although many scholars have acknowledged that Article 31(3)(c) VCLT is not equipped to resolve true treaty conflicts,Footnote 111 the ILC assigns such a role to this provision in its alleged capacity as an expression of the principle of systemic integration. It has additionally been argued that the principle of systemic integration offers the prospect of balancing different values and interests without necessarily predicating or establishing the prevalence of one norm over another.Footnote 112 The interpreter has a role in ‘prioritiz[ing] concerns that are more important at the cost of less important objectives’.Footnote 113 These claims have not been elaborated on at length, but a few points need to be underlined in light of ongoing judicial practice. First, the task of balancing values or interests is different to prioritizing them; prioritizing is but one option. Second, as will be discussed below, it is doubtful whether the balancing of different interests and values against treaty provisions can be addressed while engaging in interpretation.Footnote 114 Third, it is unclear how one can decide which concerns are most important and prioritize them accordingly; this is an exercise that is dependent on the interpreter's standpoint.
For its part, the IACtHR does not seem inclined to consider, let alone prioritize, interests and values reflected by other treaties unless those interests are perfectly aligned with the aims of the IACHR. To take an example, the Court was firm in its position that a bilateral investment treaty between Paraguay and Germany had no legal bearing on its assessment of whether a series of rights, including the right to property, of the Sawhoyamaxa community had been violated under the IACHR.Footnote 115 In a similar vein, in the Wong Ho Wing v Peru case, the bilateral extradition treaty between Peru and China was largely treated as a fact under domestic law, rather than as an international treaty to be considered in the process of interpreting and applying the right to life under the IACHR.Footnote 116 In other words, the general interest in international cooperation in the specific area of extradition did not have any bearing on the Court's analysis. Finally, in assessing the compatibility of El Salvador's amnesty law with the IACHR, the Court stated that it would take the 1992 Peace Accord and Additional Protocol II to the 1949 Geneva Conventions (AP II) into account.Footnote 117 In this instance, there seemed to be a discrepancy between, on the one hand, the requirement of the AP II to grant the broadest possible amnesties and the need to maintain the negotiated peace,Footnote 118 and, on the other, the Court's inflexible approach in declaring all amnesty laws to be incompatible with the IACHR.Footnote 119 The Court did not enter into this discussion, but simply reiterated its general position—declaring El Salvador's amnesty law to be inconsistent with the guarantees of the IACHR.Footnote 120
On the other side of the spectrum, the ECtHR is willing not only to balance external concerns and interests with the guarantees of the ECHR, but even to prioritize the former over the latter. In many instances, the ECtHR has taken other treaties (or the absence of other treaties) into account without proceeding to resolve (or avoid) a conflict of norms. It has on occasion arguably prioritized the admittedly weighty interests expressed in these treaties under international law over the applicability of the ECHR. This has had a significantly restrictive impact on the protective scope of the rights in question. In Carson, the Grand Chamber accepted that the absence of bilateral reciprocal treaties in the social security sphere is a sufficient reason to limit the applicability of Article 14 ECHR; otherwise, Article 14 would effectively undermine the right of States to enter into reciprocal agreements.Footnote 121 In Waite and Kennedy, the Plenary Court held that the right to access a court should be substantially restricted so as not to undermine the proper functioning of international organizations and international cooperation.Footnote 122 In Bosphorus, the Court established the presumption of equivalent or comparable protection between EU law and the ECHR by relying upon the principle of pacta sunt servanda and the need for the proper functioning of international organizations (relating to Ireland's EU membership).Footnote 123
A cluster of cases concerning the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction also illustrates that prioritizing the purposes and goals of other treaties may interfere with the aims, structure and effectiveness of the ECHR. The applicants before the ECtHR claimed that returning the child pursuant to the Hague Convention would be in violation of the best interests of the child and the right to family life under Article 8 ECHR. The Court refused to rigorously review whether the return of the child was in breach of the guarantees of Article 8 ECHR unless there had been an arbitrary decision by national authorities.Footnote 124 The crux of these cases involved the fact that Article 13(b) of the Hague Convention provides for an exception to the State parties’ obligation to return a child if there is a grave risk that the child's return would expose him or her to physical or psychological harm or otherwise place the child in an intolerable situation. The Court's previous case law, which applied the Hague Convention's provisions de facto via the ECHR,Footnote 125 and the importance attached to preserving the main aim of the Hague Convention (the expeditious return of the child) created the uncomfortable situation in which the Court was obliged to review the requirements of the Hague Convention in light of the ECHR.Footnote 126 On the one hand, Article 13(b) of the Hague Convention contains an exceptional ‘escape clause’ pertaining to the return of a child which must be narrowly interpreted, whereas on the other hand, the protection of the best interests and rights of the child serve as primary considerations under Article 8 ECHR (which, in turn, may be subject to restrictions). The ECtHR was hesitant to review the application of the Hague Convention against the guarantees of Article 8 ECHR in light of the risk of undermining the effective implementation of the Hague Convention.Footnote 127 The Grand Chamber, in Neulinger and Shuruk, restored this imbalance, ruling that the conditions for the enforcement of the return of the child need to be in strict conformity with Article 8 ECHR.Footnote 128
In summary, the IACtHR and the ECtHR have different approaches to other treaties. The IACtHR appears to be fixed in giving little weight to the values and interests of other treaties unless these converge with the aims and implementation of the IACHR. Some scholars have argued that this practice can be rigid and one-sided on certain occasions, especially in the context of amnesty laws. The ECtHR employs the legal methodology of systemic integration in order to justify prioritizing significant interests over the guarantees of the ECHR. The foregoing cases demonstrate that the argument that systemic integration is a means of balancing or even prioritizing among important interests raised by other treaties can lead to significant restrictions on human rights.
C. Exercising Undue Interpretive Authority over Other Treaties
An international court's receptiveness to relevant public international law rules can be a reliable indicator of a reduced risk of diverging interpretations and/or judgments, as well as bolstering cross-fertilization.Footnote 129 At the same time, however, an international court's systematic engagement with, and integration of, other treaties raises questions regarding its authority to shape the construction of these treaties. When an international court takes a treaty provision into account for interpretation purposes, it inevitably engages in an articulation of its ordinary meaning.Footnote 130 While international courts have the inherent power to construe general international law, they do not have the competence to authoritatively ascertain the ordinary meaning of treaties other than the instruments subject to their jurisdiction.
An exception to this is the jurisdiction that the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights enjoys. Article 3(1) of the Protocol establishing the ACtHPR provides that:
The jurisdiction of the Court shall extend to all cases and disputes submitted to it concerning the interpretation and application of the Charter, this Protocol and any other relevant Human Rights instrument ratified by the States concerned.Footnote 131
Pursuant to this broad jurisdiction, the Court has interpreted, applied and, accordingly, found violations of, for example, the ICCPRFootnote 132 and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Revised Treaty.Footnote 133 Yet, even in light of the exceptional scope of the ACtHPR's competence, concerns regarding the potential for undue interpretive authority over other treaties are not alleviated. Such concerns relate, obviously, to the risk of divergent interpretations of a treaty which is already supervised by another body. The vice president of the ACtHPR underlined this risk in his separate opinion in the case of Tanganyika Law Society and Legal and Human Rights Centre and Reverend Christopher R. Mtikila v United Republic of Tanzania.Footnote 134 However, these concerns are also manifested (and merit equal consideration) in situations in which a treaty is not subject to supervision by an international body or where the interpretation of one of its provisions is contested or unclear.Footnote 135 The WTO Appellate BodyFootnote 136 and international investment tribunals tend to engage only very reluctantly in the interpretation of other treaties.Footnote 137 Human rights courts, however, show no signs of hesitance in this regard.
In the X and others case,Footnote 138 the Grand Chamber was divided over the ordinary meaning of the European Convention on the Adoption of Children.Footnote 139 Seven dissenting judges strongly opined that the majority's interpretation adhered neither to the letter nor to the object and purpose of Article 7 of this Convention.Footnote 140 Moreover, the ECtHR regularly defines the ordinary meaning of debated provisions of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction and corrects the (alleged) shortcomings of national court decisions when applying this Convention.Footnote 141 Judge Pinto De Albuquerque argued that, in the absence of an oversight body for the Hague Convention, the ECtHR should ensure the uniformity of interpretation and implementation of States’ obligations under this Convention.Footnote 142 The IACtHR, in Artavia Murillo, extensively analysed many human rights treaties, and it is arguable that in the process of doing so adopted an inappropriate interpretation of the CRC and the ICCPR.Footnote 143 The Court read and adopted a specific interpretation of the right to life under these treaties that does not necessarily reflect their ordinary meaning or the current views of their supervisory bodies.Footnote 144 Such instances may be somewhat exceptional (thus far) but they may be indicative of future trends.Footnote 145 The questions that come to the surface, but are rarely discussed in literature and judicial practice, are the following: Are international courts entitled to have a say in the interpretation of other treaties? If so, what are the implications for the development of international law, and what is the role that these courts assume?
In general, all international courts are equal participants in the development of international law, including general international law (international customary law and general principles of law) and treaties.Footnote 146 As far as treaties are concerned, international courts frequently refer to and use them as interpretive aids. When doing so, they make sure to approach the authoritative meaning of a treaty provision by relying on how its interpretation has been developed by the treaty's supervisory body. If a treaty lacks a supervisory body, it is the State parties to this treaty that prescribe authoritative interpretations. Yet, it would be unreasonable to question altogether the authority of international courts and bodies to interpret other treaties, should an issue arise when deciding a case that necessitates it. Their interpretations may not be authoritative, but they do enjoy a certain authority.Footnote 147
The weight of this authority is determined by how an international court ascertains the ordinary meaning of a treaty provision. In the Hague Abduction cases discussed above, the only source that the ECtHR employed as an interpretive aid to support its findings was the 1980 Explanatory Report on the Hague Convention.Footnote 148 It was only after the Court's use of the Hague Convention was contested that it employed additional and more recent resources to interpret the Convention.Footnote 149 Although the practice of national authorities (primarily courts) of Member States to the Hague Convention is critical in the sense that it is genuinely authoritative, the ECtHR is not rigorous in identifying and analysing such practice.Footnote 150 The ECtHR in Monory invoked the practice of European States, although the treaty has been widely ratified on a global level by 94 States,Footnote 151 and the Court essentially cited the practice of one European State! In Neulinger and Shuruk, the ECtHR looked selectively into the practice of certain European and Australian domestic courts.Footnote 152 Conversely, the weight of the authority of an interpretation by the ECtHR will subsequently be tested against the practice of Member States with respect to the other treaty. This means that, for instance, ECHR Member States can, in theory, disregard the ECtHR's findings as to the interpretation of the Hague Convention; this, however, would put them in a difficult position since they are required to conform to the Court's judgments.
The increasing receptiveness of an international court to relevant treaties, if accompanied by an integrative interpretation, raises questions not only on the level of interpretation but also regarding the role that the court assumes in asserting authority over other treaties.Footnote 153 There is the risk of establishing novel, informal hierarchies among international courts on the basis of which exercises the most influential persuasive, interpretive and normative power when construing certain treaties. One cannot fail to note that the discussion over the fragmentation of international law has unfolded as a critique of or in favour of sustaining formal or informal hierarchies among international courts. The perception that the multiplicity of international courts poses a danger to the unity of international law partly reflects the hegemonic conflicts stemming from the ‘loss of hierarchical position by institutions of the ancien régime’Footnote 154 (referring mostly to the role of the ICJ). In this context, other international courts are not exempt from the same note of caution. Neither the ECtHR nor the IACtHR are immune from the temptation to establish new forms of informal hierarchies.Footnote 155 It is important to be mindful that shared ownership over international law goes hand in hand with the burden of shared responsibility for its development and for managing international dispute settlement.Footnote 156 Shared responsibility is not restricted to drafting treaty clauses that regulate overlapping jurisdictions, apply procedural principles or implement judicial comity.Footnote 157 In the everyday operation of international courts, international lawyers and judges need to be aware of the systemic implications of their judgments in order to avoid exercising undue authority over other treaties. Creativity does not preclude prudence. International courts should conduct more rigorous research on a comparative and international level, and they should enhance the quality of judicial reasoning and methodology, especially when interpreting a treaty that does not fall within their jurisdiction.Footnote 158
Finally, an argument that is often raised is that certain international courts may present the only viable opportunity to meaningfully develop the reach of a given international treaty which lacks an implementation mechanism. The IACtHR used this reasoning as a basis not only for taking other treaties into account, but also for exercising jurisdiction over the Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture,Footnote 159 despite the fact that it is unclear whether this Convention assigns this task to the Court.Footnote 160 Although such an argument is somewhat understandable given the shortcomings of the international judicial system, it is tenuous for two reasons.Footnote 161 First, it disregards the pivotal role that domestic courts can play in the interpretation and development of international law and treaties. National courts serve the role of providing accessible justice on a daily basis.Footnote 162 There is evidence to indicate that domestic courts increasingly engage with questions of international law, employ complex interpretive principles (including systemic integration) and come up with creative decisions.Footnote 163 This is not to say that innovative approaches in international litigation are not needed; rather, the point is that we should not wait for domestic remedies to be exhausted in order to pursue international justice.Footnote 164 We should treat the national judge as an agent of international justice as well. This is all the more pertinent since the national judge is in a unique position to apply the principle of systemic integration without being confined by the limited jurisdiction of an international court.Footnote 165
The second reason that the systematic and integrative approach of international courts towards other treaties is problematic is its repercussions for their legitimacy and for the overall effectiveness of human rights regime.Footnote 166 There are growing concerns among Member States to the ECHR regarding the ECtHR's practice of uncritically applying the principle of systemic integration. The lack of transparent legal reasoning and foreseeability in the case law, as well as the States’ unwillingness to transform, de facto, the ECtHR into a supervisory mechanism for their obligations of other treaties, have led to a series of incongruous preliminary objections ratione materiae. Moldova, in Tănase, strongly argued that the Court should not have used the European Convention on NationalityFootnote 167 as a tool for construing the ECHR, and that the weight attached to this Convention was inappropriate.Footnote 168 Turkey, in Demir and Baykara, objected to the integration of ILO conventions into the scope of Article 11 ECHR.Footnote 169 Similarly, the United Kingdom, in National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers, opposed the interpretive relevance of the legal assessments of the European Committee on Social Rights and the ILO Committee of Experts to the interpretation of Article 11 ECHR.Footnote 170 From the other side of the Atlantic, Member States to the IACHR have also started to show signs of unease. Paraguay, in the Juvenile Reeducation Institute case, contested the idea that socio-economic rights can be read into the scope of Article 26 IACHR.Footnote 171 In Acevedo Buendía, Peru raised a preliminary objection arguing that an alleged violation of the right to social security falls outside the Court's competence.Footnote 172 Against this background, the current president of the IACtHR and various scholars caution that the IACtHR's practice of strongly pursuing a pro homine interpretation of the IACHR by applying systemic integration will delegitimize the Court and undermine the progress it has achieved.Footnote 173
D. Does the Application of Systemic Integration in the Human Rights Regime Limit the Potential of International Law?
The role that international courts assume in the task of interpretation and their perception of that task are significant to the development of international law. Georges Abi-Saab's metaphor of international law as a parasitic plant that grows erratically by seizing on all opportunities and latching onto anything that offers the possibility of moving towards the lightFootnote 174 makes one quick to ascribe only weaknesses to the development of international law and to disregard the qualities of diversity and richness encapsulated precisely in the absence of a centralized legislative and judicial authority. International law, despite its sophistication, and its broadening and thickening in recent years, holds more firmly than ever to its old tendency to grow erratically. In their effort to look at international law in an orderly way—with a vision and a goal of bringing together and integrating all the disparate elements of the system into a single coherent story—international courts should be mindful of unintended implications. The uncritical application of the principle of systemic integration, especially in the context of international human rights law, may narrow the existing and potential reach of international law by reducing various concerns and interests to the human rights paradigm.
An exemplary case concerns the integration of environmental norms into the scope of the ECHR, bringing about the long-awaited integration of environmental concerns into human rights discourse.Footnote 175 This is, in principle, a positive development. Few note, however, the now-prevailing individualistic perspective with regard to environmental protection, and fewer still recognize that the concept of the environment as a public good, indispensable for the life and welfare of society as a whole, is being reduced to a restricted set of individual rights of a procedural character.Footnote 176 Neither the European nor the Inter-American Courts of Human Rights address an ecological approach to the environment, nor do they appreciate environmental integrity and degradation as issues affecting the community per se.Footnote 177 This narrow approach has important legal consequences: environmental damage can only be translated into the violation of a human right;Footnote 178 the victim requirement before international courts is not informed by the collective dimension of environmental integrity; and environmental regulations introduced by States can be assessed only as potential limitations to human rights.Footnote 179 It could be argued that other regimes and approaches mitigate the shortcomings entrenched in human rights discourse and practice. Yet such an argument disregards the fact that the practice of international human rights courts and bodies is disproportionately influential and, hence, it is highly likely that the ‘narrowest but strongest argument for a human right to the environment’Footnote 180 will survive and become mainstreamed into the future development of international law, hindering its potential evolution in other directions.Footnote 181
Similar considerations apply to other areas and concerns under international law. It is unclear to what extent human rights treaties—even in light of the integrative and groundbreaking jurisprudence of the IACtHR—are structurally equipped to include and articulate indigenous understandings of ownership.Footnote 182 It is clear that the IACtHR has not acknowledged indigenous people as a collective group, as rights-holders under the IACHR, but rather as individual members of the community.Footnote 183 Neither does the systemic integration approach of the IACtHR give due regard to the potential of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.Footnote 184 The IACtHR made a choice—one that was never acknowledged—between the ILO Conventions and the UN Declaration, the latter of which sets more demanding standards, more difficult to reconcile with the IACHR.Footnote 185 Equally concerning is the integration of socio-economic rights into the discourse of civil and political human rights, insofar as we might question whether it is reasonable to expect that the imbalance of power in labour relations and in the complex area of social rights can and should be mediated through the ECHR or the IACHR. In the same vein, the language of human rights is (to some extent) ill-suited to describe how corruption causes harm to socio-economic rights,Footnote 186 or to acknowledge the effects of systemic discrimination and stigmatization.Footnote 187 In addition, despite the significant contribution of human rights courts and bodies to recognizing domestic violence as a human rights issue, there are limitations on how far human rights law can go to protect individuals from violations occurring in the private sphere.Footnote 188 Another topical question is whether international human rights law is capable of articulating and remedying the contemporary refugee crisis.Footnote 189 And then there is the issue of protecting human rights online. International human rights law is currently attempting to grasp in legal form the concerns pertinent to the digital environment.Footnote 190 To what extent, however, will the human rights paradigm recognize the complex and distinctive interrelationship between network/national/individual security and online privacy? In the online environment, privacy and aspects of security can be in both a symbiotic and an antithetical relationship,Footnote 191 and privacy can be an important prerequisite for exercising freedom of expression. Nonetheless, according to the structure of human rights law, it is challenging to protect privacy and freedom of expression at the same time; instead, one can only be assessed as a legitimate restriction on the other. How will this dynamic relationship be incorporated into, and inform, legal reasoning and the proportionality test?Footnote 192
The foregoing points are not intended to understate the relevance and significance of the human rights approach to other interests and concerns. Pursuing systemic integration within the human rights arena may lead to progressive developments in international law and enrich the human rights discourse while adding value to, and highlighting, new areas of interest. However, one should question whether we should settle for the strongest arguments, which in practice seem to be the easiest arguments to make. Human rights are simultaneously part of the solution and the problem; its well-established and powerful doctrinal and rhetorical vocabulary dominates the imaginative scope of international law and overshadows other possible articulations.Footnote 193 In this context, the principle of systemic integration arguably tends to accelerate and intensify this process: the human rights paradigm not only overshadows but also subsumes other emerging areas by ‘squeezing’ them into its own vocabulary, aims, structure and scope. Aspects of these new areas and interests in the law that are not readily reducible to human rights may remain embryonic or fall between the cracks.Footnote 194 In this sense, international law's store of available words and possible future meanings is being constrained and impoverished.Footnote 195 Progress and stagnation stand on opposite sides of a very fine line:Footnote 196 mitigating fragmentation and ensuring consistency should not impede the progressive development of international law in pursuit of more radical and imaginative changes, even if this means that the available narratives become less coherent.
It needs to be underscored that this is a process familiar in many quarters of international law and practice: other areas and regimes may raise similar questions when engaging with other treaties and concerns. It is also true that, in general, human rights law shapes and, in turn, is shaped by other fields and norms in a dynamic, non-linear fashion.Footnote 197 The present discussion, however, shifts the debate from the conventional focus on interactions among well-known regimes (or the interactions of regimes vis-à-vis general international law) to how the human rights paradigm may develop and/or inhibit the legal articulation of numerous other interests under international law. Applying systemic integration arguably has a unique net effect in the human rights area for a number of reasons: in contrast to other international institutions, human rights courts and bodies are increasingly receptive to the technique of systemic integration;Footnote 198 as discussed above, human rights possesses a persuasive and appealing discourse that can monopolize our attention; and, finally, judgments by prominent human rights courts are particularly influential and contain the promise of enforcement, especially vis-à-vis norms and treaties that lack monitoring mechanisms.Footnote 199
To conclude, the consideration and possible incorporation of other interests under international law into human rights and the use of systemic integration in the instances discussed in this article must not become our comfort zone. On the one hand, human rights bodies should acknowledge, engage with and integrate other concerns into their interpretations. On the other, and to the extent that the human rights structure and its conceptual tools fail to accommodate other concerns, we should continue exploring what is legally possible and acceptable for the international legal community.Footnote 200 This could involve forging different norm interactions and synergies or looking into creating different international fora. One way forward could be to move in the direction of setting up more monitoring mechanisms and/or international judicialization. In this way, various interests in international society could be evenly represented and more diverse approaches could be on the table. Yet, even if it is to be assumed that States would give their consent to establishing these mechanisms, international supervision (of a judicial nature or otherwise) in itself does not necessarily guarantee that we will respond effectively to emerging and complex questions. Human rights and international law expertise needs to be both creative in construing the law and mindful of their own limitations.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
This article has argued that systemic integration is neither the ultimate answer to difficulties arising from the fragmentation of international law nor a problem-free interpretive technique. Legal interpretation alleviates certain difficulties presented by fragmentation, but it cannot resolve the need for international courts to reject their fragmented lens and ‘piecemeal’ decision-making. One might also assume that applying systemic integration within one functional regime—the human rights regime—would present fewer challenges than applying systemic integration across different regimes. The analysis in this article has provided evidence demonstrating that this is not the case. In fact, it is perhaps a greater challenge to identify subtle contextual differences between treaties originating in the human rights regime or to preserve the aims and specificity of the ECHR, the IACHR or the ACHPR vis-à-vis other human rights and human rights-related treaties.
The application of systemic integration (or Article 31(3)(c) with the goal of systemic integration in mind) should not be understood as the legal basis upon which to align the contents of a treaty with the contents of other treaties. Ensuring consistency and cross-fertilization requires due appreciation of the contextual nuances in different treaties. In the current practice of the ECtHR and the IACtHR, we encounter cases in which these Courts indirectly apply and supervise other treaties under the guise of systemic integration. Such instances stretch the boundaries of these Courts’ jurisdictional limitations and mandates, if indeed they do not exceed them. The critical analysis in this article should not be seen as a call for textualism or an abandonment of attempts at creativity—it is rather a call to be creative while at the same time striving for a more rigorous methodology and more transparency in legal reasoning and judgments. Legal reasoning is not merely a matter of applying rigid legal technique but rather requires the knowledge, when employing other treaties to interpret a treaty, of where the limits to this exercise of interpretation lie.
Most importantly, this article has stressed that we should be aware of the (unintentional) ramifications of pursuing systemic integration or systemic integration-like interpretive exercises in the human rights area. A court's systematic engagement with other treaties, especially when those treaties lack a monitoring mechanism, may lead to the exercise of undue interpretive authority over treaty provisions that are contested or unclear. Moreover, systemic integration does not always benefit the diversity of international law or the development of other bodies of law. Providing the opportunity for other areas of international law to reach their potential, addressing pressing global issues via different avenues or even acknowledging that human rights law cannot ameliorate the prevalent policy incoherence in international law-making are important values which should remind courts to avoid reducing some of the concerns of international law to the standards and language of the human rights regime. These concerns are not frequently raised, notwithstanding the fact that international human rights courts have made important contributions to progressively developing both their own treaty regimes and some other interests under international law. There remains a real risk that human rights practice and discourse will overshadow and subsume some important concerns.