International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions

The Vienna Convention on the Law of International Treaties of 1969 over the fi fty years of its existence has become a symbol of the international legal order where the rule of law enshrined in multilateral agreements is dominant. The obligation of international treaties provisions, however, is cons...

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Main Authors: Viktor P. Kirilenko, Georgy V. Alekseev, Maria V. Yandukova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: President of the Russian Federation, Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administration, North-West Institute of Management 2019-09-01
Series:Евразийская интеграция: экономика, право, политика
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.eijournal.ru/jour/article/view/234
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author Viktor P. Kirilenko
Georgy V. Alekseev
Maria V. Yandukova
author_facet Viktor P. Kirilenko
Georgy V. Alekseev
Maria V. Yandukova
author_sort Viktor P. Kirilenko
collection DOAJ
description The Vienna Convention on the Law of International Treaties of 1969 over the fi fty years of its existence has become a symbol of the international legal order where the rule of law enshrined in multilateral agreements is dominant. The obligation of international treaties provisions, however, is constantly in doubt, as in the context of globalization, developed states adhere to their international obligations not under the fear of political sanctions, such as retorts and reprisals, but because of the need to maintain high reputation and authority on the international political field. The rationality of international agreements implementation at the national level is often criticized for the reason that, firstly, certain international obligations have become obsolete, and, secondly, any contractual limitation of state sovereignty is intended to achieve economic and/or political goals. Obviously, a unilateral withdrawal of a state from an international treaty is possible only on previously agreed terms, but the usual practice of fulfilling international obligations demonstrates that the content of the principle of pactasunt servanda depends largely on the interpretation of international law, dictated by the doctrine of constitutional justice and legislative policy of sovereign power.
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spelling doaj.art-ec9b15c505084d0994252be3c83f82622024-04-11T12:16:04ZengPresident of the Russian Federation, Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administration, North-West Institute of ManagementЕвразийская интеграция: экономика, право, политика2073-29292019-09-01034352233International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical ConditionsViktor P. Kirilenko0Georgy V. Alekseev1Maria V. Yandukova2Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration (North-West Institute of Management of RANEPA)Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration (North-West Institute of Management of RANEPA)St. Petersburg Institute (branch) of the All-Russian State University of JusticeThe Vienna Convention on the Law of International Treaties of 1969 over the fi fty years of its existence has become a symbol of the international legal order where the rule of law enshrined in multilateral agreements is dominant. The obligation of international treaties provisions, however, is constantly in doubt, as in the context of globalization, developed states adhere to their international obligations not under the fear of political sanctions, such as retorts and reprisals, but because of the need to maintain high reputation and authority on the international political field. The rationality of international agreements implementation at the national level is often criticized for the reason that, firstly, certain international obligations have become obsolete, and, secondly, any contractual limitation of state sovereignty is intended to achieve economic and/or political goals. Obviously, a unilateral withdrawal of a state from an international treaty is possible only on previously agreed terms, but the usual practice of fulfilling international obligations demonstrates that the content of the principle of pactasunt servanda depends largely on the interpretation of international law, dictated by the doctrine of constitutional justice and legislative policy of sovereign power.https://www.eijournal.ru/jour/article/view/234treatyconventiondoctrineintegrationcooperationobligations
spellingShingle Viktor P. Kirilenko
Georgy V. Alekseev
Maria V. Yandukova
International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
Евразийская интеграция: экономика, право, политика
treaty
convention
doctrine
integration
cooperation
obligations
title International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
title_full International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
title_fullStr International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
title_full_unstemmed International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
title_short International Treaties and Jurisdiction of States in Modern Geopolitical Conditions
title_sort international treaties and jurisdiction of states in modern geopolitical conditions
topic treaty
convention
doctrine
integration
cooperation
obligations
url https://www.eijournal.ru/jour/article/view/234
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