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10 Nnamdi Azikiwe U. J. Int'l L. & Juris. 1 (2019)

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NAUJILJ 10 (1) 2019

     WHY STATES COMPLY WITH DECISIONS OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS
       TRIBUNALS: A REVIEW OF THE PRINCIPAL THEORIES AND PERSPECTIVES*

Abstract
As the legalisation of international politics gain momentum through growing adoption of multilateral
treaties and proliferation of intergovernmental institutions especially administrative and judicial
mechanisms for the protection of human rights, one area offocus for scholars ought to be the incentives for
states to comply with the norms and standards set by these many bodies. This paper takes the reader down
memory lane by reviewing the various theories and perspectives of leading scholars on why states comply
with international law with particular focus in the concluding part on why states comply with decisions of
international human rights bodies. The paper concludes that while most scholars generally agree that state
compliance is driven by instrumental or normative considerations or both, it remains largely contested which
of these broad theories account for most acts of compliance by state actors. The paper argues the need for
further research specific to each international and regional human rights system as the factors that drive
states towards compliance differ from state to state and region to region.

Keywords: Theories, State Compliance, International Law, Human Rights Tribunals

1. Introduction
International law compliance is generally acknowledged as one of the fastest growing sub-fields of
international legal scholarship. However, not many realise that human rights judgment compliance is
gradually gaining momentum as the fastest growing sub-division of international law compliance.1 The
interest in why states comply with international law may be as old as international law itself. In fact, some
scholars have claimed that state compliance may be relied upon as a primary test of the adequacy of
international law.2 Oette, for example, argues that compliance and enforcement constitute 'a litmus test for
the effectiveness of the international human rights system.'3 Using compliance as a test of the effectiveness
of international law and judgments of international human rights tribunals (IHRTs) implies that without a
theory of international law compliance, it is impossible to assess the effectiveness of international law and
IHRTs. Effectiveness, for this purpose, is defined as the extent or degree to which international law induces
the desired change at the domestic level.4 Notwithstanding its importance to the enforcement of international
norms, the weight of state compliance as the ultimate goal of international law has been criticized. Howse
and Teitel, for example, argued that too much focus on compliance 'obfuscates the character of international
legal nonnativity', and the concept of compliance, especially viewed as rule observance, is inadequate for
understanding how international law has normative effects.5 The need to reach beyond the compliance optic,

*Victor 0. AYENI, PhD, Lecturer, Faculty of Law, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko, Ondo State.
Email: victorayeni7@gmail.com. Phone: +2347066711568. The analysis and arguments in this paper draws from
a doctoral thesis completed by the author at the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, South Africa.
1 R Howse & R Teitel, 'Beyond Compliance: Rethinking Why International Law Really Matters' (2010) 174 New
York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers, p.2. For an annotated bibliography of the major
works on compliance with international law, see WC Bradford, 'International Legal Compliance: An Annotated
Bibliography' (2004) 30 North Carolina Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation, pp.379-423.
2 See, for instance, AT Guzman, 'A Compliance-Based Theory of International Law' (2002) 90 California Law
Review, p.1826; OA Hathaway, 'Between Power and Principle: An Integrated Theory of International Law'
(2005) The University of Chicago Law Review, p.473; S Baradaran, M Findley, D Nielson & JC Sharman, 'Does
International Law Matter?' (2013) 97 Minnesota Law Review, p.743.
I L Oette, 'Bringing the Enforcement Gap: Compliance of States Parties with Decisions of Human Rights Treaty
Body' (2010) 16 Interights Bulletin, p.51.
4 See R Murray & D Long, The Implementation of the Findings of the African Commission on Human andPeoples'
Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) p.29; K Raustiala, 'Compliance and Effectiveness in
International Regulatory Cooperation' (2000) 32 Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law, pp.393-
394.
' R Howse & R Teitel (n. 1) p.2.


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