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International Trade Law Assignment
International Trade Law Assignment
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Default clause:
International trade participants with a broad market number, and not only, justify participation in
the production and use default clauses in international trade agreements. They are invariable under
a certain form of arrangement, which is regularly drawn up and contains elements important to
that arrangement, which are decided in advance. The default clauses in international trade
agreements have the same legal meaning as any contract which is negotiated explicitly and openly
by the parties. Exceptionally, the peculiar default clauses whose existence could not possibly have
been foreseen by the parties have no legal effect if they had not been specifically accepted by the
contracting parties.
2. Explain the significance of international treaties and conventions. Give one example to
support your answer.
International conventions are treaties between nations, or agreements. Often, "international
convention" is used interchangeably with terms such as "international treaty," "international
agreement," "compact" or "state contract."
International Treaties are the most common means of establishing international rules or standards
to which States and other actors of the international community are required to comply.
International treaties are sometimes referred to as conventions, agreements, covenants, 'laws,
memoranda of understanding, statutes, etc. The terminology varies but the substance is the same:
they all denote 'an amalgamation of the wills of two or more international subjects for the purpose
of regulating their interests by international rules. This definition indicates the importance of treaty
in establishing 'international rules' for regulating subject interests. The importance of 'international
treaty' in establishing international laws is significantly enhanced in modern international law. In
short, their value has been central in the following spectrum:
Establishment of foreign bodies or foreign regulatory mechanisms. One of the major shortcomings
found by international law's classical theorists is linked to the consistency of their 'compliance.' It
has also been said that international law has failed to have an impact because of its lack of
'compliance' mechanism. This issue has been addressed by the increasing significance of
international treaty making process.
Creating a treaty is an essential 'international law producing mode.' Since the process of making a
treaty calls for 'conscious debate and deliberation on topics to be discussed, it is claimed that the
terms of the treaty have 'most concrete rules' on such matters. Making international laws through
a treaty thus making the most desired 'how international laws are generated.'
Enlargement and institutionalisation of the 'universality' of human rights is one of the most notable
accomplishments of post-1945 international treaties.
While treaties establish responsibility for the parties, the moral perspective that they also provide
is enormous for the group of States and citizens. Accordingly, treaty enforcement is backed by
'legal and moral approval.' In contemporary international law the classical view that the treaty only
binds the parties to it is not necessarily valid. After 1945, the changed international order outlook
and the increasing interdependence of states created a positive environment for states to 'assume
responsibilities created by treaties,' even though they are not parties.
For example, human rights are assessed by UN conventions and covenants. Daily State
assessments track the enforcement of the rights enshrined in these Treaties. Every nation's analysis
provides an opportunity to educate people and demand recognition of the rights enshrined in the
treaties their governments have ratified. One of the best examples is the International Convention
on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Family Members (CRMW) which is a
global political agreement to ensure dignity and equality in an age of globalisation. The
Convention sets minimum requirements for migrant workers and their family members, with a
emphasis on reducing labour abuse in the migration process. The monitoring period is an essential
mechanism for ensuring that legal commitments under the core human rights conventions are met.
The process provides a unique opportunity to determine the state of protection of human rights
within one's own jurisdiction and to establish a national strategy for effective policy making and
enforcement of the rights recognised in the Convention.
References:
1. Sangroula, Yubaraj (January 2010), International Treaties: Features and Importance from
International Law Perspective
2. Joshua Cooper (June 2017), Cultural Survival Quarterly Magazine, Convention on the
protection of the rights of all migrant workers and their families.
3. Dörr, Oliver & Schmalenbach, Kirsten. (2012). Introduction: On the Role of Treaties in the
Development of International Law.