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51 Harv. Int'l L.J. 113 (2010)
Translating the Standard of Effective Control into a System of Effective Accountability: How Liability Should Be Apportioned for Violations of Human Rights by Member State Troop Contingents Serving as United Nations Peacekeepers

handle is hein.journals/hilj51 and id is 115 raw text is: VOLUME 51, NUMBER 1, WINTER 2010

Translating the Standard of Effective Control
into a System of Effective Accountability:
How Liability Should be Apportioned for
Violations of Human Rights by Member
State Troop Contingents Serving as
United Nations Peacekeepers
Tom Dannenbaum*
When United Nations peacekeepers violate human rights, they do immeasurable damage to their vic-
tims, their missions, and themselves. Reparation for these wrongs is essential for both rebuilding the trust
that is needed for effective peacekeeping and affirming the human dignity of those who suffer the abuse.
However, because of the unique status of peacekeepers as both troops in their respective national services and
members of an international U.N. force, the question of which entity is liable for reparation is particu-
larly complicated. This Article provides a comprehensive analysis of the law and practice of reparation for
the human rights abuses of U.N. peacekeepers and advances a new interpretation of how the effective
control standard of liability attribution should be applied in this context. Specifically, this Article finds
that both the United Nations and troop-contributing states are subject to human rights law under certain
circumstances. It also finds that both the United Nations and the troop-contributors are subject to the
fundamental duty to revedy human rights violations for which they are responsible. The key question is
how to determine, for a given situation, which international legal person is responsible for the human
rights abuses of peacekeepers. Effective control is the correct governing principle. However, rather than
overall operational control as advocated by a number of jurists and as applied in some courts, effective
control must be understood to mean control most likely to be effective in preventing the wrong in question.
Applying this revised principle to the peacekeeping context, this Article proposes a five-category framework
through which to assess the appropriate locus of responsibility for peacekeepers' human rights violations.
Emphasizing the importance of considering the full complexity of the command and control relationships
between states, the United Nations and peacekeepers, this framework significantly expands the liability of
troop-contributing states from what remains de facto immunity under existing interpretations in the vast
majority of situations. Finally, by implementing joint and several liability wherever feasible within the
confines of effective control, the proposed framework seeks to maximize the avenues to remedy for victims
without prejudice to the fairness and effectiveness of a framework that accurately locates those most
responsible.
* J.D. Candidate, Yale Law School; Ph.D. Candidate, Political Theory, Princeton University. I am
grateful to Michael Reisman, Amy Chua, Emilie Hafner-Burton, Dapo Akande, Alec Stone Sweet, Peggy
Czyzak-Dannenbaum, and Keya Jayaram for their astute comments, inspiration, and encouragement. A
special thanks is also due to the editors of the Harvard International Law Journal, particularly Beth
Newton, Anna Lind-Guzik, and Soojin Nam, for their insightful suggestions and criticisms and for
expertly guiding the article through to publication. All errors, of course, remain the sole responsibility of
the author.

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