Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2009
Objectives of the study
‘Permanent sovereignty over natural resources’ is one of the more controversial new principles of international law that have evolved since World War Two. During this period the decolonization process has taken place and newly independent States have sought to develop new principles and rules of international law in order to assert and strengthen their position in international relations and to promote their social and economic development. The principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources was introduced in United Nations debates in order to underscore the claim of colonial peoples and developing countries to the right to enjoy the benefits of resource exploitation and in order to allow ‘inequitable’ legal arrangements, under which foreign investors had obtained title to exploit resources in the past, to be altered or even to be annulled ab initio, because they conflicted with the concept of permanent sovereignty. Industrialized countries opposed this by reference to the principle of pacta sunt servanda and respect for acquired rights.
This study has three main objectives. Firstly, to map the evolution of permanent sovereignty over natural resources (hereafter ‘permanent sovereignty’) from a political claim to a principle of international law. The hypothesis is that resolutions of the political organs of the United Nations have been instrumental in this. Secondly, to show that the principle of permanent sovereignty has not evolved in isolation but as part and parcel of other trends in international law.
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