The Missing Link in Migration Governance: An Advisory Opinion by the International Court of Justice
12 Thursday Jul 2018
By Achilles Skordas, Professor of International Law at the University of Copenhagen
The Odysseus Network wants to thank warmly EJIL:Talk! that published an earlier version of this blog (available here) for the kind authorisation to put it again at the disposal of our readers. The author Achilles Skordas will participate tonight in a debate on interception of migrants at sea organised in the framework of the Odysseus Summer School.
Even though the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has jurisdiction to resolve disputes on the interpretation and application of the 1951 Refugee Convention (Art. 38) and the 1967 Protocol (Art. IV), it has so far not adopted any relevant judgment or advisory opinion. States have not shown interest in activating the Court’s jurisdiction with regard to the Refugee Convention, but they have done so in a variety of disputes broadly linked to transboundary movement of persons or to international protection: Latin American diplomatic asylum (Asylum and Haya de la Torre cases), consular assistance (LaGrand and Avena cases), and extradition, arrest or surrender of persons suspected of war crimes and crimes against humanity (Arrest Warrant and Habré cases), and terrorism (Lockerbie case).
As the world currently faces the worst migration crisis since WWII in terms of destabilization potential, due to the combined effects of the wars in Libya and Syria, and poverty in the Sahel, it is time to consider the challenges and benefits of the potential involvement of the ICJ in the global efforts of migration management and international protection. There are three questions to discuss, (a) necessity, (b) feasibility and (c) contribution of a potential ICJ ruling.










