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Mexican law review
versión On-line ISSN 2448-5306versión impresa ISSN 1870-0578
Resumen
SANCHEZ DE TAGLE, Gonzalo. The Objective International Responsibility of States in the Inter-American Human Rights System. Mex. law rev [online]. 2015, vol.7, n.2, pp.115-133. ISSN 2448-5306.
The international responsibility of States is based on two legal precepts: first, a State must be subject to international obligations; and second, a State must be responsible for noncompliance with such obligations. Specific and concrete damages are not required for the allocation of international responsibility to a State. Given these elements, the Inter-American Human Rights System, through the Inter-American Court, will not hear disputes involving a State's international responsibility without the existence of a specific and concrete human rights violation. While this seems appropriate, rulings by the Inter-American Court have subsequently opened the door to States' objective international responsibility; i.e., responsibility under the American Convention on Human Rights that require no showing of a specific violation. In the author's view, the international responsibility of States, similar to Public International Law, should be based on noncompliance without the need for a victim especially in human rights cases. For this reason, the Inter-American Court is correct in holding States responsible for domestic laws that contravene its own human rights commitments under international treaties regardless of whether or not these norms have been enforced.
Palabras llave : International Human Rights Law; Objective International Responsibility of the State; Internationally Wrongful Acts; Inter-American Court of Human Rights.