Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2006
Publication Title
Columbia Journal of Transnational Law
Keywords
treaties, international law, commercial law, secured transactions, Convention on International Interests in Mobile Equipment
Abstract
The use of multilateral treaties in the field of international commercial law has been in a state of steady decline. Traditional treaty law has been gradually replaced in recent years by softer methods of making international law, such as the use of restatements and model laws. Some scholars even claim that treaty law is dead or dying. This Article explains how the Cape Town Convention on International Interests in Mobile Equipment (which entered into force on March 1, 2006) provides an innovative approach to the creation of treaties that promises to revive the status of treaties in international law. The "Cape Town approach" to treaty formation is characterized by a novel use of protocols that brings new flexibility to the treaty structure. This Article examines the Cape Town Convention's use of protocols and explores the potential of the "Cape Town approach" as a new tool for making international law.
Repository Citation
Mark J. Sundahl, The Cape Town Approach: A New Method of Making International Law, 44 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 339 (2006)
Publisher's Statement
Originally published in 44 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 339 (2006).
Volume
44