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38 S. Ill. U. L.J. [i] (2013-2014)

handle is hein.journals/siulj38 and id is 1 raw text is: 







      SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY

                            LAW JOURNAL

Volume 38                                                                     Fall 2013


   THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE VIENNA CONVENTION ON
                            CONSULAR RELATIONS


                                     ARTICLES



VIENNA CONVENTION ON CONSULAR RELATIONS: IN RETROSPECT AND
INTO THE FUTURE
      John B. Quigley                                    ................1... ................1
          In the half-century since the adoption of its text, the Vienna Convention on
          Consular Relations has done great service by providing specificity on the
          obligations of receiving States to let consuls do their work, in particular their
          work of protecting co-nationals who find themselves in the receiving State. By
          virtue of a jurisdictional protocol appended to the Vienna Convention on
          Consular Relations, the International Court of Justice has been opened to state
          parties who seek to hold other state parties to their consular law obligations. In
          recent years, the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations has featured
          prominently as a protective device for persons arrested on criminal charges
          outside their state of nationality. The International Court of Justice has given
          details on the obligations of a receiving State in this situation, thereby making
          clear how this important protective device must be implemented.



RENDERED MEANINGLESS? SECURITY DETENTIONS AND THE EROSION OF
CONSULAR ACCESS RIGHTS
      Mark Warren               ........................................... 27
          From incommunicado confinement to extraordinary renditions, the harsh
          countermeasures adopted worldwide in response to the threat of terrorist attacks
          have profoundly undermined the basic rights of detained foreign nationals. One
          aspect of these controversial responses merits more attention than it has so far
          received: the widespread denial of timely consular access to foreign detainees
          suspected of terrorist activities, in breach of the Vienna Convention on Consular
          Relations and other binding treaty obligations.

          This Article explores the erosive effect of security detentions on the universality
          of consular access rights. It includes a survey of bilateral consular agreements
          and anti-terrorism treaties, two important but often overlooked sources of
          authority on the contemporary understanding of consular notification and access
          obligations. The Article also summarizes the corrective recommendations now
          emerging from public inquiries, foreign service policy reviews, intelligence
          agencies, and human rights colloquia. This diversity of perspectives offers
          innovative proposals for rebuilding the essential safeguard of consular protection
          to meet the rigors of a new and threatening global landscape.

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