The internal effects of ASEAN external relations / Ingo Venzke and Li-ann Thio.
2016
KNE168 .V46 2016 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Items
Details
Author
Title
The internal effects of ASEAN external relations / Ingo Venzke and Li-ann Thio.
Published
Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Call Number
KNE168 .V46 2016
ISBN
9781316606551 (paperback)
1316606554 (paperback)
1316606554 (paperback)
Description
xx, 233 pages ; 22 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)934192587
Summary
"Starting with a typology of ASEAN external agreements, the authors go on to provide an original reading of plurilateral agreements as 'joint' agreements. The book then offers both a clarification of the effects - direct or indirect - of external agreements within the legal orders of ASEAN Member States, and an explanation of the effects of external agreements within the legal regime of ASEAN. The authors conclude with a discussion of the role of ASEAN centrality and the role of the secretariat in shaping it"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Added Author
Table of Contents
General editors' preface
xi
Acknowledgements
xvii
List of abbreviations
xviii
1.
Introduction and parameters of inquiry
1
2.
Contextualising ASEAN
7
2.1.
ASEAN Charter: continuity or rupture?
8
2.2.
consensus rule
12
2.3.
Towards legalisation
17
2.4.
Institutional set-up by comparison
23
2.5.
`ASEAN legal order' or an `ASEAN legal regime'?
25
3.
Types of external agreements
28
3.1.
Agreements by ASEAN as an International Organization
31
3.2.
Plurilateral agreements
33
3.3.
Joint ASEAN agreements
34
4.
Agreements of ASEAN as an International Organization
36
4.1.
Introductory note on the Secretariat
36
4.2.
Other ASEAN actors in external relations
38
4.3.
Contours of external powers
40
4.4.
Implied external powers?
47
4.5.
Who is bound? The effect on Member States
50
4.6.
Members' concurrent and subsidiary responsibility or indirect liability
55
5.
Plurilateral agreements
71
5.1.
Terminology: monism, dualism and (in)direct effects
74
5.2.
Views from general international law
79
5.3.
Requirements of specific legal instruments and regimes
91
5.4.
view from European law
97
5.5.
view from domestic law
103
5.5.1.
Dualism
105
5.5.2.
Monism
113
5.6.
Usual mixtures
121
5.6.1.
Effects on interpretation
122
5.6.2.
Kinds of agreements
130
5.7.
Law and policy considerations
131
6.
Case study on the Convention to Eliminate All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
136
6.1.
Status of treaty law within domestic legal orders
139
6.2.
Constitutional amendments and judicial enforcement
143
6.2.1.
Embodying treaty obligations in basic law
143
6.2.2.
Use of treaty norms to inform the formulation of fundamental laws
146
6.2.3.
Specific clauses
151
6.3.
Conforming statutes to CEDAW
153
6.4.
National mechanisms
163
6.5.
Promotional activities and non-legal approaches
169
7.
Joint ASEAN agreements
174
7.1.
(ill-)fitting comparison: mixed agreements
178
7.2.
ASEAN centrality and obligations of membership
180
7.3.
Consequences for Member State institutions: ASEAN centrality
185
7.4.
Functions of the Secretariat
188
7.4.1.
Channeling information, coordination
189
7.4.2.
Implementation and facilitating compliance
192
7.4.3.
Monitoring
193
7.5.
Dispute settlement mechanisms
195
8.
Conclusions: assessing the internal effects of ASEAN external relations
201
Executive summary
205
Bibliography
209
Index
223