Standard-Setting in UN System Organizations

Standard-Setting in UN System Organizations

Files

Description

The absence of explicit lawmaking authority has not prevented international organizations from producing ‘standards’ that deviate from the ways the traditional sources of international law—treaties, custom, general principles—are usually understood. Despite the fact the UN was not given plenary authority to conclude treaties, a functionalist ‘principle of speciality’ imposes subject matter limits on UN system organizations, and entities charged with progressively developing or codifying the law (such as the International Law Commission (ILC)) can only make recommendations, the extent of standard-setting by international organizations vastly exceeds what might be expected from such limitations.

Source Publication

The Cambridge Companion to International Organizations Law

Source Editors/Authors

Jan Klabbers

Publication Date

2022

Standard-Setting in UN System Organizations

Share

COinS