Book contents
- Access to Justice and International Organisations
- Access to Justice and International Organisations
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 International Organisations and Their Access to Justice Obligation
- 2 The Criteria for Assessing the Appropriateness of Dispute Resolution Mechanisms at International Organisations
- 3 Assessing Dispute Resolution Mechanisms at International Organisations
- 4 The Nature of Institutional Immunities
- 5 Realising Access to Justice in Claims against International Organisations
- Conclusion
4 - The Nature of Institutional Immunities
A Conundrum Yet to Be Resolved
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 March 2022
- Access to Justice and International Organisations
- Access to Justice and International Organisations
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 International Organisations and Their Access to Justice Obligation
- 2 The Criteria for Assessing the Appropriateness of Dispute Resolution Mechanisms at International Organisations
- 3 Assessing Dispute Resolution Mechanisms at International Organisations
- 4 The Nature of Institutional Immunities
- 5 Realising Access to Justice in Claims against International Organisations
- Conclusion
Summary
This chapter focuses on how the application of an IO’s jurisdictional immunities prevent victims from accessing justice at the national level. The discussion first focuses on the basis of an IO’s domestic legal personality which allows suits to be brought against them at all. The chapter then identifies how IO immunities are applied today. Whereas IO immunities were intended to be functional, they have become by and large de facto absolute. This means that a claimant’s case is procedurally defeated and the merits do not get a chance to be ventilated. There are some indications that the tide might be shifting in favour of the claimant. Still, the way in which claims against IOs are addressed at the national level is unsustainable and requires a fundamental reframing.
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- Access to Justice and International OrganisationsCoordinating Jurisdiction between the National and Institutional Legal Orders, pp. 131 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022