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4 - ASEAN as a contracting party

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

Marise Cremona
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence
David Kleimann
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence
Joris Larik
Affiliation:
The Hague Institute for Global Justice
Rena Lee
Affiliation:
Attorney-General’s Chambers, Singapore
Pascal Vennesson
Affiliation:
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter addresses a question of fundamental importance to ASEAN external relations: which entities are the parties to the agreements and other instruments concluded or issued in the name of ASEAN? As practice to date shows, there is by no means one straightforward answer to this. According to its Charter, ASEAN has been accorded legal personality (Article 3) as well as an explicit international treaty-making power (Article 41(7)). However, the procedures for exercising the latter, for the elaboration of which the Charter mandates ‘the ASEAN Coordinating Council in consultation with the ASEAN Community Councils’ (Article 41(7)), remained wanting until recently (Chapter 2 above). Nonetheless, there are instances in which ASEAN, on its own behalf as an international organisation, has concluded international agreements even before the Charter entered into force. Furthermore, it was pointed out that the Charter exhibits rather grand ambitions for ASEAN in its relations with the region and the world at large (see Chapter 2 above). But as this chapter shows, this means in no way that ASEAN, as an international legal person, acts as the protagonist in the expanding practice of external relations. There is little apparent consistency in how ASEAN presents itself to its partners (Appendix 3 below).

Hence, in order to better understand ASEAN as an international actor, deeper scrutiny of this issue becomes imperative with a view to revealing certain patterns of action by ASEAN and its members, but also to highlighting certain characteristics of its external action, i.e. recurring cases of confusion as to which entity its external partners are actually dealing with. This chapter will elaborate on this in the following order: to start, the existing practice is systematised into different modes which ASEAN employs to conclude international instruments with its partners, which distinguish between the use of ASEAN as a collective label by its member states and the acts of ASEAN as an international legal person.

Type
Chapter
Information
ASEAN's External Agreements
Law, Practice and the Quest for Collective Action
, pp. 84 - 133
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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