Pierfrancesco Rossi | University of Teramo (original) (raw)

Papers by Pierfrancesco Rossi

Research paper thumbnail of La compatibilità con il diritto internazionale e la Costituzione italiana dell’invio di aiuti militari all’Ucraina

Quaderni di SIDIBlog, 2023

Questo contributo esamina la questione se l’invio di aiuti militari alle forze armate ucraine sia... more Questo contributo esamina la questione se l’invio di aiuti militari alle forze armate ucraine sia compatibile con gli obblighi internazionali dell’Italia e con le disposizioni della sua Costituzione. Si sostiene che la risposta debba considerarsi positiva da entrambi i punti di vista. In particolare, l’assistenza militare all’Ucraina non sembra integrare alcuna violazione del diritto internazionale dal punto di vista tanto dello jus ad bellum quanto dello jus in bello. Tale assistenza non è vietata neppure dagli obblighi internazionali in materia di trasferimenti di armi, e in particolare dal Trattato sul commercio delle armi. Conclusioni analoghe, infine, possono estendersi alle disposizioni a vocazione internazionalistica della Costituzione italiana, in primis l’art. 11. Ciò perché il «ripudio della guerra» contenuto in questo articolo deve essere interpretato alla luce delle disposizioni di diritto internazionale che regolano l’uso della forza.

Research paper thumbnail of Italian courts and the evolution of the law of State immunity: A reassessment of Judgment no 238/2014

QIL - Questions of International Law, 2022

Research paper thumbnail of Status internazionale della Santa Sede e categorie della statualità

La Comunità Internazionale, 2022

SOMMARIO: 1. Introduzione. – 2. La problematica equiparazione tra Santa Sede e Stati alla luce de... more SOMMARIO: 1. Introduzione. – 2. La problematica equiparazione tra Santa Sede e Stati alla luce della dottrina che vede nella Santa Sede un soggetto internazionale sui generis. – 3. La questione della statualità dello Stato della Città del Vaticano. – 4. Il rapporto tra la Santa Sede e lo Stato della Città del Vaticano. Critica alle teorie secondo cui essi sarebbero due soggetti distinti di diritto internazionale. – 5. Segue: il carattere unitario della personalità giuridica internazionale della Santa Sede e dello Stato della Città del Vaticano e sue conseguenze: la Santa Sede come ente titolare di doppia personalità giuridica, sui generis e statuale. – 6. Conclusioni. Ricadute nell’ambito delle immunità giurisdizionali: l’inapplicabilità dell’immunità degli Stati alle funzioni della Santa Sede di natura non statale.

Research paper thumbnail of Call for papers - XIX Incontro di studio tra giovani internazionalisti - Luiss - 2 dicembre 2022

La tutela giurisdizionale dell'ambiente nel diritto internazionale, pubblico e privato, ed europeo

Research paper thumbnail of International Fundamental Values and Obligations Erga Omnes

The Protection of General Interests in Contemporary International Law: A Theoretical and Empirical Inquiry (Oxford University Press 2021), 2021

This chapter argues that international law is a value-oriented legal order, and that the way in w... more This chapter argues that international law is a value-oriented legal order, and that the way in which its fundamental values are safeguarded reflects the unique structural features of the international legal system. In lack of an international constitution in a formal sense, the international fundamental values materialize through the brute practice of states, international organizations, and a number of open-ended legal concepts allowing the legal relevance of the underlying ethical convictions of the international community. In the field of international responsibility, such is the function fulfilled by the concept of obligations erga omnes. This chapter maintains that lawful responses to breaches of obligations erga omnes should always bear some elements of collectiveness. This condition realizes not only through institutionalized processes but also by means of a wide range of collective, scarcely formalized procedures of concertation of state action which may take place in institutional, political, or diplomatic settings.

Research paper thumbnail of Using International Law for Construing Domestic Law: A Study of Consistent Interpretation

Archiv des Völkerrechts, 2020

This paper analyzes the technique of consistent interpretation, one of the most common tools by w... more This paper analyzes the technique of consistent interpretation, one of the most common tools by which national courts give effect to international law. After describing the functions that consistent interpretation can conceivably perform in the domestic implementation of international law and clarifying its conceptual relationship to direct application, the contribution inquires into the legal bases of this judicial technique. Such legal bases, it is argued, do not lie in international law, which provides no directives to national courts on this matter. Instead, domestic courts justify their interpretive reliance on international law by resorting to domestic law rationales: notably, the presumed intent of the legislature, the domestic hierarchy of laws or the pursuance of relevant principles or values. It is shown that, in many respects, the extent and limits of consistent interpretation depend on which rationale a court relies on. On this basis, the study submits that the possibility to realize the potentials of consistent interpretation rests primarily on the courts’ willingness to exploit the international law-friendly traits of national constitutions.

Research paper thumbnail of State Immunity and the Rights of Employees: Lights and Shadows of the Strasbourg Court's Jurisprudence - Imunidade do Estado e os Direitos dos Funcionários: Luzes e Sombras da Jurisprudência do Tribunal de Estrasburgo

Brazilian Journal of International Law, 2021

Research paper thumbnail of La rilevanza per il giudice nazionale della giurisprudenza "consolidata" della Corte europea dei diritti dell'uomo

G. Palmisano (a cura di), Il diritto internazionale ed europeo nei giudizi interni, Napoli, Editoriale Scientifica, 2020

1. Introduzione. – 2. La (limitata) vincolatività del precedente europeo per il giudice italiano:... more 1. Introduzione. – 2. La (limitata) vincolatività del precedente europeo per il giudice italiano: alcuni punti fermi. – 3. I dubbi sollevati dalle “sentenze gemelle” e i successivi chiarimenti: la giurisprudenza costituzionale sui limiti all’obbligatorietà del precedente europeo tra il 2007 e il 2014. – 4. Le innovazioni introdotte dalla sentenza n. 49 del 2015 e il concetto di “giurisprudenza europea consolidata”. – 5. L’inadeguatezza della nozione di “giurisprudenza consolidata” e dei criteri (formali) per la sua individuazione. – 6. Le difficoltà applicative della nozione di “giurisprudenza consolidata” nella prassi giurisprudenziale. – 7. Un modello alternativo per circoscrivere la vincolatività dei precedenti europei: l’approccio sostanzialistico e la ricerca della soluzione più giusta nel caso concreto. – 8. Un possibile meccanismo per mettere in pratica l’approccio sostanzialistico: l’obbligo per il giudice nazionale di prendere in considerazione i precedenti europei (c.d. taking into account approach). – 9. Conclusioni.

Research paper thumbnail of Politica dei "porti chiusi" e diritto internazionale: il caso Sea Watch 3

Osservatorio AIC, 2019

In June 2019 the Sea Watch 3, an NGO ship carrying migrants rescued at sea, was banned to enter I... more In June 2019 the Sea Watch 3, an NGO ship carrying migrants rescued at sea, was banned to enter Italian ports and territorial waters under the so-called 'closed ports' policy of the Italian government. After a two-week standoff, the ship contravened the prohibition and entered the port of Lampedusa, where the captain Carola Rackete was arrested for violence against public officers. However, a judge soon ordered her release on grounds that her actions were required by the international law of the sea. This paper analyzes the main international law issues raised by this incident, notably including the legitimacy of the ban on entering Italian territorial waters and ports. It is argued that, while the 'closure' of the territorial sea appears to be unlawful, that of Italy's ports does not. This reflects the deficiencies of the international law norms concerning disembarkation of people rescued at sea.

Research paper thumbnail of The Aftermath of the Italian Constitutional Court Judgment No. 238 of 2014 in Exequatur and Enforcement Proceedings

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2018

State immunity from civil jurisdiction – Measures of constraint against foreign State property – ... more State immunity from civil jurisdiction – Measures of constraint against foreign State property – Enforcement of foreign judgments awarding compensation to victims of Nazi crimes – Judgment No. 238 of 2014 of the Italian Constitutional Court – ICJ Jurisdictional Immunities of the State (Germany v. Italy: Greece intervening) judgment

Research paper thumbnail of The International Law Significance of Jam v. IFC: Some Implications for the Immunity of International Organizations

Diritti umani e diritto internazionale, 2019

This paper identifies two main international law implications of the US Supreme Court Judgment in... more This paper identifies two main international law implications of the US Supreme Court Judgment in Jam v. International Finance Corp. Firstly, treaty-based international organization (IO) immunities prevail over the restrictive immunity granted by the International Organizations Immunities Act (IOIA). However, while this principle certainly applies when a treaty provides for broader immunity than the IOIA, it is doubtful whether the IOIA can be derogated by a treaty providing for more limited immunity. Because the Jam Court resorted to the IOIA to supplement more restrictive treaty provisions, i.e. to increase the scope of treaty-based immunity, it is argued that the IOIA may concretely serve as a ‘minimum threshold’ of immunity and not, as the Court put it, as a ‘default rule’. Secondly, Jam left the door open to raising a functionalist defence to claims against IOs, i.e. to bar the exercise of jurisdiction if the litigation may obstruct an IO’s functions. It also implied that such a ‘functionalist’ argument could be raised as a defence before lower courts. And even though it did not clearly define the controversial concept of ‘functional immunity’, it did set some boundaries: one, it is not synonym to absolute immunity; and two, in order to prove that a lawsuit interferes with the functions of an IO, a high standard of proof (that of ‘excessive liability’) is required. The paper concludes by observing that, although the Supreme Court proved indifferent to human rights considerations, it may seem advisable for US courts to partially reconsider this view in future cases.

Research paper thumbnail of China, in "Duelling for Supremacy: International Law vs. National Fundamental Principles", F.M. Palombino ed., Cambridge University Press 2019

Duelling for Supremacy: International Law vs. National Fundamental Principles, F.M. Palombino ed., Cambridge University Press, 2019

Book Description: It is a settled rule of international law that a State may not rely on the prov... more Book Description: It is a settled rule of international law that a State may not rely on the provisions of its 'internal law' as justification for failing to comply with international obligations. However, the judiciaries of most countries, including those with a high record of compliance with international norms, have increasingly felt the need to preserve the area of fundamental principles, where the State's inclination to retain full sovereignty seems to act as an unbreakable 'counter-limit' to the limitations deriving from international law. This volume explores this trend by adopting a comparative perspective, addressing the question of how conflicts between international law and national fundamental principles are dealt with and resolved within a specific legal system. The contributing authors identify common tendencies and fundamental differences in the approaches and evaluate the implications of this practice for the future of the principle of supremacy of international law.

Research paper thumbnail of Controversie di lavoro e immunità degli Stati esteri: tra codificazione e sviluppo del diritto consuetudinario

Rivista di diritto internazionale, 2019

This article examines the relationship between customary international law and Article 11 of the ... more This article examines the relationship between customary international law and Article 11 of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property, which applies to claims brought against foreign States by their employees. Although Article 11 has been found by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) to codify customary international law in its entirety, it is argued that neither the travaux nor State practice support this conclusion. Rather, both converge to show that Article 11 provides for a significantly wider immunity than is required by customary international law. The paper then analyzes the impact that Article 11 may have on the future evolution of customary international law by influencing domestic and international judicial practice. This impact appears to be ambivalent. While the ECtHR has referred to Article 11 in order to promote a broader access to courts by State employees, the coalescence of State practice and the provisions of Article 11 may well cause immunity to be extended, at least in countries where the approach of national courts is generally more favorable than Article 11 to the protection of the employees’ rights. The recent Italian case law attests to this risk.

Research paper thumbnail of Conflicting Approaches of the Court of Cassation to State Immunity in Employment Disputes

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Il Presidente della Repubblica e il rispetto degli obblighi internazionali: in margine al primo rinvio alle Camere per contrasto con l'art. 117, 1° comma, Cost.

Rivista di diritto internazionale, 2018

On 27 October 2017, the President of the Republic Mattarella, pursuant to Article 74, paragraph 1... more On 27 October 2017, the President of the Republic Mattarella, pursuant to Article 74, paragraph 1, of the Constitution, refused to promulgate a law on account of a possible breach of Italy’s obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty and the Convention on Cluster Munitions. The President detailed the reasons for his refusal in a message to Parliament. Although the content of this message is questionable to some degree, it is argued that the President’s choice to make use of his constitutional powers to ensure compliance with international obligations should be welcomed and should form a precedent for the future activity of the Presidency. The President’s preventive control on legislation may prove particularly important in situations where — as in the case at hand — a conflict between national law and international law would not be rectifiable through ex-post judicial review.

Research paper thumbnail of L'interpretazione conforme alla giurisprudenza della Corte EDU: quale vincolo per il giudice italiano?

Osservatorio sulle fonti, 2018

The Italian Constitutional Court’s current approach to the value of ECtHR case law in domestic pr... more The Italian Constitutional Court’s current approach to the value of ECtHR case law in domestic proceedings, as most recently framed in Judgment No. 49/2015, has provoked criticism from commentators and given rise to inconsistent judicial practice. After an analysis of the main features of this approach, this article makes two proposals in order to address its shortcomings. Firstly, it suggests that the obligation to interpret domestic law consistently with ECtHR case law should be qualified as a ‘duty to take into account’. Pursuant to this model, which is adopted inter alia by UK and German courts, national judges must consider all ECtHR precedents relevant to their decision, but are allowed to depart from them by putting forward cogent substantive arguments. It is argued that this model can reconcile the need to promote compliance with ECtHR case law with the need to safeguard the scope of liberty that the ECHR itself provides to national courts. Secondly, the paper contends that, in order to give an adequate constitutional foundation to the ‘duty to take into account’ ECtHR case law, the Italian Constitutional Court might follow in the footsteps of the German Constitutional Court and adopt an axiological conception of consistent interpretation. That is, the ‘duty to take into account’ might be grounded on the openness of the Italian Constitution towards international law, rather than on the ECHR’s status in the Italian hierarchy of laws.

Research paper thumbnail of Public Policy and Enforcement of Foreign Awards: An Appraisal of China's Judicial Practice

Diritto del commercio internazionale, 2017

This article analyzes how the public policy exception enshrined in Art. V(2)(b) of the 1958 New Y... more This article analyzes how the public policy exception enshrined in Art. V(2)(b) of the 1958 New York Convention has been interpreted and applied by Chinese courts. A critical appraisal is provided of the situations in which the public policy exception has been or may be applied and those in which its application has been ruled out. Specifically, the paper first deals with the principle of residual application of public policy; it then expounds on violations of res judicata, morality and mandatory provisions, as well as with the substantive unfairness of the award; and finally, it deals with the dubious case of the enforcement of awards made abroad with reference to a purely domestic dispute. An in-depth analysis is devoted both to the established principles’ legal underpinnings and to the issues that remain partially unsettled, with a view to contributing to the clarification of these issues. The study demonstrates that, although Art. V(2)(b) has been applied restrictively, public policy remains a vital concept in Chinese judicial practice. However, much uncertainty revolves around its possible contents, so that the outcome of future rulings may seem to some extent unpredictable.

Research paper thumbnail of La Rete dei Saperi nelle università napoletane da Federico II al duemila: Diritto internazionale

Questo scritto analizza la storia dell'insegnamento del diritto internazionale nelle università n... more Questo scritto analizza la storia dell'insegnamento del diritto internazionale nelle università napoletane dal 1861 ai giorni nostri. È stato pubblicato con il titolo "Diritto internazionale" nel Volume II de "La Rete dei Saperi nelle università napoletane da Federico II al duemila", a cura di Cesare de Seta, Napoli, Arte'm, 2018, pp. 323-331.

Research paper thumbnail of Embassy of Spain to the Holy see v De la Grana Gonzales, Académie de France à Rome v Galamini, and Lasaracina v Embassy of the UAE (Italian Yearbook of International Law 2014)

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2014

The three decisions discussed in this note stand as turning points in the copious case law of the... more The three decisions discussed in this note stand as turning points in the copious case law of the Italian Court of Cassation in the area of State immunity in employment disputes. Indeed, the Court held for the first time that Article 11 of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property, on “contracts of employment”, corresponds to customary international law and applied that norm pursuant to Article 10(1) of the Italian Constitution, which provides for the automatic incorporation of customary international law into Italian law. This note proves that all three decisions are based on poor legal reasoning and constitute, with few exceptions, an overall setback in the protection of the rights of the employees.

Research paper thumbnail of Consulate General of Peru in Milan v Tabibnia (Italian Yearbook of International Law 2015)

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2015

In the order under comment, the Corte di Cassazione provided an application of the doctrine of re... more In the order under comment, the Corte di Cassazione provided an application of the doctrine of restrictive immunity by holding that a Consulate’s refusal to return seized property that it had voluntarily accepted for safekeeping, as a result of an interim measure, fell outside the field of acta jure imperii, and therefore that the Italian courts retained jurisdiction on the matter. Moreover, the Court stated that the acceptance for safekeeping amounted to an implied waiver of immunity from jurisdiction.

Research paper thumbnail of La compatibilità con il diritto internazionale e la Costituzione italiana dell’invio di aiuti militari all’Ucraina

Quaderni di SIDIBlog, 2023

Questo contributo esamina la questione se l’invio di aiuti militari alle forze armate ucraine sia... more Questo contributo esamina la questione se l’invio di aiuti militari alle forze armate ucraine sia compatibile con gli obblighi internazionali dell’Italia e con le disposizioni della sua Costituzione. Si sostiene che la risposta debba considerarsi positiva da entrambi i punti di vista. In particolare, l’assistenza militare all’Ucraina non sembra integrare alcuna violazione del diritto internazionale dal punto di vista tanto dello jus ad bellum quanto dello jus in bello. Tale assistenza non è vietata neppure dagli obblighi internazionali in materia di trasferimenti di armi, e in particolare dal Trattato sul commercio delle armi. Conclusioni analoghe, infine, possono estendersi alle disposizioni a vocazione internazionalistica della Costituzione italiana, in primis l’art. 11. Ciò perché il «ripudio della guerra» contenuto in questo articolo deve essere interpretato alla luce delle disposizioni di diritto internazionale che regolano l’uso della forza.

Research paper thumbnail of Italian courts and the evolution of the law of State immunity: A reassessment of Judgment no 238/2014

QIL - Questions of International Law, 2022

Research paper thumbnail of Status internazionale della Santa Sede e categorie della statualità

La Comunità Internazionale, 2022

SOMMARIO: 1. Introduzione. – 2. La problematica equiparazione tra Santa Sede e Stati alla luce de... more SOMMARIO: 1. Introduzione. – 2. La problematica equiparazione tra Santa Sede e Stati alla luce della dottrina che vede nella Santa Sede un soggetto internazionale sui generis. – 3. La questione della statualità dello Stato della Città del Vaticano. – 4. Il rapporto tra la Santa Sede e lo Stato della Città del Vaticano. Critica alle teorie secondo cui essi sarebbero due soggetti distinti di diritto internazionale. – 5. Segue: il carattere unitario della personalità giuridica internazionale della Santa Sede e dello Stato della Città del Vaticano e sue conseguenze: la Santa Sede come ente titolare di doppia personalità giuridica, sui generis e statuale. – 6. Conclusioni. Ricadute nell’ambito delle immunità giurisdizionali: l’inapplicabilità dell’immunità degli Stati alle funzioni della Santa Sede di natura non statale.

Research paper thumbnail of Call for papers - XIX Incontro di studio tra giovani internazionalisti - Luiss - 2 dicembre 2022

La tutela giurisdizionale dell'ambiente nel diritto internazionale, pubblico e privato, ed europeo

Research paper thumbnail of International Fundamental Values and Obligations Erga Omnes

The Protection of General Interests in Contemporary International Law: A Theoretical and Empirical Inquiry (Oxford University Press 2021), 2021

This chapter argues that international law is a value-oriented legal order, and that the way in w... more This chapter argues that international law is a value-oriented legal order, and that the way in which its fundamental values are safeguarded reflects the unique structural features of the international legal system. In lack of an international constitution in a formal sense, the international fundamental values materialize through the brute practice of states, international organizations, and a number of open-ended legal concepts allowing the legal relevance of the underlying ethical convictions of the international community. In the field of international responsibility, such is the function fulfilled by the concept of obligations erga omnes. This chapter maintains that lawful responses to breaches of obligations erga omnes should always bear some elements of collectiveness. This condition realizes not only through institutionalized processes but also by means of a wide range of collective, scarcely formalized procedures of concertation of state action which may take place in institutional, political, or diplomatic settings.

Research paper thumbnail of Using International Law for Construing Domestic Law: A Study of Consistent Interpretation

Archiv des Völkerrechts, 2020

This paper analyzes the technique of consistent interpretation, one of the most common tools by w... more This paper analyzes the technique of consistent interpretation, one of the most common tools by which national courts give effect to international law. After describing the functions that consistent interpretation can conceivably perform in the domestic implementation of international law and clarifying its conceptual relationship to direct application, the contribution inquires into the legal bases of this judicial technique. Such legal bases, it is argued, do not lie in international law, which provides no directives to national courts on this matter. Instead, domestic courts justify their interpretive reliance on international law by resorting to domestic law rationales: notably, the presumed intent of the legislature, the domestic hierarchy of laws or the pursuance of relevant principles or values. It is shown that, in many respects, the extent and limits of consistent interpretation depend on which rationale a court relies on. On this basis, the study submits that the possibility to realize the potentials of consistent interpretation rests primarily on the courts’ willingness to exploit the international law-friendly traits of national constitutions.

Research paper thumbnail of State Immunity and the Rights of Employees: Lights and Shadows of the Strasbourg Court's Jurisprudence - Imunidade do Estado e os Direitos dos Funcionários: Luzes e Sombras da Jurisprudência do Tribunal de Estrasburgo

Brazilian Journal of International Law, 2021

Research paper thumbnail of La rilevanza per il giudice nazionale della giurisprudenza "consolidata" della Corte europea dei diritti dell'uomo

G. Palmisano (a cura di), Il diritto internazionale ed europeo nei giudizi interni, Napoli, Editoriale Scientifica, 2020

1. Introduzione. – 2. La (limitata) vincolatività del precedente europeo per il giudice italiano:... more 1. Introduzione. – 2. La (limitata) vincolatività del precedente europeo per il giudice italiano: alcuni punti fermi. – 3. I dubbi sollevati dalle “sentenze gemelle” e i successivi chiarimenti: la giurisprudenza costituzionale sui limiti all’obbligatorietà del precedente europeo tra il 2007 e il 2014. – 4. Le innovazioni introdotte dalla sentenza n. 49 del 2015 e il concetto di “giurisprudenza europea consolidata”. – 5. L’inadeguatezza della nozione di “giurisprudenza consolidata” e dei criteri (formali) per la sua individuazione. – 6. Le difficoltà applicative della nozione di “giurisprudenza consolidata” nella prassi giurisprudenziale. – 7. Un modello alternativo per circoscrivere la vincolatività dei precedenti europei: l’approccio sostanzialistico e la ricerca della soluzione più giusta nel caso concreto. – 8. Un possibile meccanismo per mettere in pratica l’approccio sostanzialistico: l’obbligo per il giudice nazionale di prendere in considerazione i precedenti europei (c.d. taking into account approach). – 9. Conclusioni.

Research paper thumbnail of Politica dei "porti chiusi" e diritto internazionale: il caso Sea Watch 3

Osservatorio AIC, 2019

In June 2019 the Sea Watch 3, an NGO ship carrying migrants rescued at sea, was banned to enter I... more In June 2019 the Sea Watch 3, an NGO ship carrying migrants rescued at sea, was banned to enter Italian ports and territorial waters under the so-called 'closed ports' policy of the Italian government. After a two-week standoff, the ship contravened the prohibition and entered the port of Lampedusa, where the captain Carola Rackete was arrested for violence against public officers. However, a judge soon ordered her release on grounds that her actions were required by the international law of the sea. This paper analyzes the main international law issues raised by this incident, notably including the legitimacy of the ban on entering Italian territorial waters and ports. It is argued that, while the 'closure' of the territorial sea appears to be unlawful, that of Italy's ports does not. This reflects the deficiencies of the international law norms concerning disembarkation of people rescued at sea.

Research paper thumbnail of The Aftermath of the Italian Constitutional Court Judgment No. 238 of 2014 in Exequatur and Enforcement Proceedings

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2018

State immunity from civil jurisdiction – Measures of constraint against foreign State property – ... more State immunity from civil jurisdiction – Measures of constraint against foreign State property – Enforcement of foreign judgments awarding compensation to victims of Nazi crimes – Judgment No. 238 of 2014 of the Italian Constitutional Court – ICJ Jurisdictional Immunities of the State (Germany v. Italy: Greece intervening) judgment

Research paper thumbnail of The International Law Significance of Jam v. IFC: Some Implications for the Immunity of International Organizations

Diritti umani e diritto internazionale, 2019

This paper identifies two main international law implications of the US Supreme Court Judgment in... more This paper identifies two main international law implications of the US Supreme Court Judgment in Jam v. International Finance Corp. Firstly, treaty-based international organization (IO) immunities prevail over the restrictive immunity granted by the International Organizations Immunities Act (IOIA). However, while this principle certainly applies when a treaty provides for broader immunity than the IOIA, it is doubtful whether the IOIA can be derogated by a treaty providing for more limited immunity. Because the Jam Court resorted to the IOIA to supplement more restrictive treaty provisions, i.e. to increase the scope of treaty-based immunity, it is argued that the IOIA may concretely serve as a ‘minimum threshold’ of immunity and not, as the Court put it, as a ‘default rule’. Secondly, Jam left the door open to raising a functionalist defence to claims against IOs, i.e. to bar the exercise of jurisdiction if the litigation may obstruct an IO’s functions. It also implied that such a ‘functionalist’ argument could be raised as a defence before lower courts. And even though it did not clearly define the controversial concept of ‘functional immunity’, it did set some boundaries: one, it is not synonym to absolute immunity; and two, in order to prove that a lawsuit interferes with the functions of an IO, a high standard of proof (that of ‘excessive liability’) is required. The paper concludes by observing that, although the Supreme Court proved indifferent to human rights considerations, it may seem advisable for US courts to partially reconsider this view in future cases.

Research paper thumbnail of China, in "Duelling for Supremacy: International Law vs. National Fundamental Principles", F.M. Palombino ed., Cambridge University Press 2019

Duelling for Supremacy: International Law vs. National Fundamental Principles, F.M. Palombino ed., Cambridge University Press, 2019

Book Description: It is a settled rule of international law that a State may not rely on the prov... more Book Description: It is a settled rule of international law that a State may not rely on the provisions of its 'internal law' as justification for failing to comply with international obligations. However, the judiciaries of most countries, including those with a high record of compliance with international norms, have increasingly felt the need to preserve the area of fundamental principles, where the State's inclination to retain full sovereignty seems to act as an unbreakable 'counter-limit' to the limitations deriving from international law. This volume explores this trend by adopting a comparative perspective, addressing the question of how conflicts between international law and national fundamental principles are dealt with and resolved within a specific legal system. The contributing authors identify common tendencies and fundamental differences in the approaches and evaluate the implications of this practice for the future of the principle of supremacy of international law.

Research paper thumbnail of Controversie di lavoro e immunità degli Stati esteri: tra codificazione e sviluppo del diritto consuetudinario

Rivista di diritto internazionale, 2019

This article examines the relationship between customary international law and Article 11 of the ... more This article examines the relationship between customary international law and Article 11 of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property, which applies to claims brought against foreign States by their employees. Although Article 11 has been found by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) to codify customary international law in its entirety, it is argued that neither the travaux nor State practice support this conclusion. Rather, both converge to show that Article 11 provides for a significantly wider immunity than is required by customary international law. The paper then analyzes the impact that Article 11 may have on the future evolution of customary international law by influencing domestic and international judicial practice. This impact appears to be ambivalent. While the ECtHR has referred to Article 11 in order to promote a broader access to courts by State employees, the coalescence of State practice and the provisions of Article 11 may well cause immunity to be extended, at least in countries where the approach of national courts is generally more favorable than Article 11 to the protection of the employees’ rights. The recent Italian case law attests to this risk.

Research paper thumbnail of Conflicting Approaches of the Court of Cassation to State Immunity in Employment Disputes

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Il Presidente della Repubblica e il rispetto degli obblighi internazionali: in margine al primo rinvio alle Camere per contrasto con l'art. 117, 1° comma, Cost.

Rivista di diritto internazionale, 2018

On 27 October 2017, the President of the Republic Mattarella, pursuant to Article 74, paragraph 1... more On 27 October 2017, the President of the Republic Mattarella, pursuant to Article 74, paragraph 1, of the Constitution, refused to promulgate a law on account of a possible breach of Italy’s obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty and the Convention on Cluster Munitions. The President detailed the reasons for his refusal in a message to Parliament. Although the content of this message is questionable to some degree, it is argued that the President’s choice to make use of his constitutional powers to ensure compliance with international obligations should be welcomed and should form a precedent for the future activity of the Presidency. The President’s preventive control on legislation may prove particularly important in situations where — as in the case at hand — a conflict between national law and international law would not be rectifiable through ex-post judicial review.

Research paper thumbnail of L'interpretazione conforme alla giurisprudenza della Corte EDU: quale vincolo per il giudice italiano?

Osservatorio sulle fonti, 2018

The Italian Constitutional Court’s current approach to the value of ECtHR case law in domestic pr... more The Italian Constitutional Court’s current approach to the value of ECtHR case law in domestic proceedings, as most recently framed in Judgment No. 49/2015, has provoked criticism from commentators and given rise to inconsistent judicial practice. After an analysis of the main features of this approach, this article makes two proposals in order to address its shortcomings. Firstly, it suggests that the obligation to interpret domestic law consistently with ECtHR case law should be qualified as a ‘duty to take into account’. Pursuant to this model, which is adopted inter alia by UK and German courts, national judges must consider all ECtHR precedents relevant to their decision, but are allowed to depart from them by putting forward cogent substantive arguments. It is argued that this model can reconcile the need to promote compliance with ECtHR case law with the need to safeguard the scope of liberty that the ECHR itself provides to national courts. Secondly, the paper contends that, in order to give an adequate constitutional foundation to the ‘duty to take into account’ ECtHR case law, the Italian Constitutional Court might follow in the footsteps of the German Constitutional Court and adopt an axiological conception of consistent interpretation. That is, the ‘duty to take into account’ might be grounded on the openness of the Italian Constitution towards international law, rather than on the ECHR’s status in the Italian hierarchy of laws.

Research paper thumbnail of Public Policy and Enforcement of Foreign Awards: An Appraisal of China's Judicial Practice

Diritto del commercio internazionale, 2017

This article analyzes how the public policy exception enshrined in Art. V(2)(b) of the 1958 New Y... more This article analyzes how the public policy exception enshrined in Art. V(2)(b) of the 1958 New York Convention has been interpreted and applied by Chinese courts. A critical appraisal is provided of the situations in which the public policy exception has been or may be applied and those in which its application has been ruled out. Specifically, the paper first deals with the principle of residual application of public policy; it then expounds on violations of res judicata, morality and mandatory provisions, as well as with the substantive unfairness of the award; and finally, it deals with the dubious case of the enforcement of awards made abroad with reference to a purely domestic dispute. An in-depth analysis is devoted both to the established principles’ legal underpinnings and to the issues that remain partially unsettled, with a view to contributing to the clarification of these issues. The study demonstrates that, although Art. V(2)(b) has been applied restrictively, public policy remains a vital concept in Chinese judicial practice. However, much uncertainty revolves around its possible contents, so that the outcome of future rulings may seem to some extent unpredictable.

Research paper thumbnail of La Rete dei Saperi nelle università napoletane da Federico II al duemila: Diritto internazionale

Questo scritto analizza la storia dell'insegnamento del diritto internazionale nelle università n... more Questo scritto analizza la storia dell'insegnamento del diritto internazionale nelle università napoletane dal 1861 ai giorni nostri. È stato pubblicato con il titolo "Diritto internazionale" nel Volume II de "La Rete dei Saperi nelle università napoletane da Federico II al duemila", a cura di Cesare de Seta, Napoli, Arte'm, 2018, pp. 323-331.

Research paper thumbnail of Embassy of Spain to the Holy see v De la Grana Gonzales, Académie de France à Rome v Galamini, and Lasaracina v Embassy of the UAE (Italian Yearbook of International Law 2014)

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2014

The three decisions discussed in this note stand as turning points in the copious case law of the... more The three decisions discussed in this note stand as turning points in the copious case law of the Italian Court of Cassation in the area of State immunity in employment disputes. Indeed, the Court held for the first time that Article 11 of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property, on “contracts of employment”, corresponds to customary international law and applied that norm pursuant to Article 10(1) of the Italian Constitution, which provides for the automatic incorporation of customary international law into Italian law. This note proves that all three decisions are based on poor legal reasoning and constitute, with few exceptions, an overall setback in the protection of the rights of the employees.

Research paper thumbnail of Consulate General of Peru in Milan v Tabibnia (Italian Yearbook of International Law 2015)

Italian Yearbook of International Law, 2015

In the order under comment, the Corte di Cassazione provided an application of the doctrine of re... more In the order under comment, the Corte di Cassazione provided an application of the doctrine of restrictive immunity by holding that a Consulate’s refusal to return seized property that it had voluntarily accepted for safekeeping, as a result of an interim measure, fell outside the field of acta jure imperii, and therefore that the Italian courts retained jurisdiction on the matter. Moreover, the Court stated that the acceptance for safekeeping amounted to an implied waiver of immunity from jurisdiction.

Research paper thumbnail of Call for papers: "Il contenzioso interno come mezzo di tutela di beni e valori comuni" - Lecce, 17 giugno 2020

In occasione del XXV Convegno SIDI su «Beni e valori comuni nelle dimensioni internazionale e sov... more In occasione del XXV Convegno SIDI su «Beni e valori comuni nelle dimensioni internazionale e sovranazionale», il Gruppo di Interesse «Diritto interno e diritto internazionale» organizza una tavola rotonda con lo scopo di esplorare le potenzialità, già espresse o latenti, del ricorso al contenzioso interno come mezzo di tutela di beni e valori globali, espressione che abbraccia la più ampia gamma di interessi collettivi tutelati dal diritto internazionale. In una fase storica segnata dal sempre più raro ricorso al trattato multilaterale universale, dalla complessiva debolezza del processo di codificazione e dal ricadere della giurisdizione internazionale in una fase recessiva o di stasi dopo le illusioni alimentate dagli exploits del post-Guerra fredda, il contenzioso interno è come mai prima sollecitato, da attori locali e/o internazionalmente organizzati, a trattare questioni di ordine e interesse globali, applicando un diritto internazionale "rifratto" dal diritto interno, sia processuale sia sostanziale. Quali risultati ha prodotto e può produrre e quali limiti di natura contingente o strutturale incontra l'uso strategico del contenzioso interno agli scopi indicati? La decisione della Corte suprema olandese nel caso Urgenda rispecchia una tendenza capace di investire altri settori materiali, oltre a quello del cambiamento climatico, o più che altro mostra in controluce i limiti del contenzioso interno? Il Gruppo di Interesse DIEDI invita tutti gli studiosi interessati a proporre riflessioni sul tema inviando un abstract di non oltre 500 parole, corredato da un breve CV.

Research paper thumbnail of Call for papers: «More equal than others»? Il principio di uguaglianza nel diritto internazionale ed europeo (XVII Incontro tra giovani cultori delle materie internazionalistiche, 13 novembre 2020)

La XVII edizione dell'Incontro tra giovani cultori delle materie internazionalistiche è dedicata ... more La XVII edizione dell'Incontro tra giovani cultori delle materie internazionalistiche è dedicata al principio di uguaglianza nel diritto internazionale ed europeo. L'Incontro intende esplorarne le dinamiche e le implicazioni, con particolare riguardo alle situazioni di squilibrio che vengono a crearsi tra gli attori del diritto internazionale pubblico, nel diritto internazionale privato e nel diritto dell'Unione europea.

Research paper thumbnail of XXIV Convegno annuale SIDI, "Il diritto internazionale ed europeo nei giudizi interni", 5-6 giugno 2019, Roma

Research paper thumbnail of ESIL Research Forum 2019, "The International and Domestic Rule of Law - Synergies and Challenges", 4-5 April 2019, University of Göttingen

Research paper thumbnail of Migration and the Rule of Law (Workshop Programme) - 3 April 2019, University of Göttingen

ESIL Interest Group on Migration and Refugee Law - Workshop on Migration and the Rule of Law

Research paper thumbnail of International Law Immunities and Employment Claims: A Critical Appraisal (flyer)

This book provides the first comprehensive analysis of the international law regime of jurisdicti... more This book provides the first comprehensive analysis of the international law regime of jurisdictional immunities in employment matters. Three main arguments lie at its heart. Firstly, this study challenges the widely held belief that international immunity law requires staff disputes to be subject to blanket or quasi-absolute immunity from jurisdiction. Secondly, it argues that it is possible to identify welldefined standards of limited immunity to be applied in the context of employment litigation against foreign states, international organizations and diplomatic and consular agents. Thirdly, it maintains that the interaction between the applicable immunity rules and international human rights law gives rise to a legal regime that can provide adequate protection to the rights of employees. A much-needed study into an under-researched field of international and employment law.