1 Introduction

Philip Alston originally coined the ‘not-a-cat’ syndrome to describe how we look at non-state actors (NSAs): as being characterized by what they are not—namely states—rather than by what they are.Footnote 1 States have indeed captured the imagination, to the extent that for a variety of NSAs, statehood may appear to be the ultimate prize, the nec plus ultra of being taken seriously in the international community.Footnote 2 In this short contribution, drawing on my experience as a rapporteur of the International Law Association’s Committee on Non-State Actors (2008–2014), I shed some light on how our epistemic community has come to venerate the state as the structural embodiment of politico-legal order, as ‘the hero’ in international law narratives (Sect. 2)—and how, nevertheless, NSAs have been allowed to carve out a space for themselves (Sect. 3). Subsequently, I will give a bird’s eye view of NSAs’ extant rights (Sect. 4) and obligations (Sect. 5) under international law, i.e., the scope of their international legal personality. I will argue that in spite of NSAs’ gradual emancipation, to this very day, the presence of the state—as the gatekeeper of the international legal system and the circle of relevant international legal subjects—continues to loom large in discussions on international legal subjectivity (Sect. 6). In this contribution, I focus in particular on organized non-state collectivities, such as non-governmental organizations, corporations, and armed groups. I pay only marginal attention to individuals and intergovernmental organizations.

2 Monoglossia: The State as the Hero of International Law

Hero worship is not unique to the law. It speaks to a deep human desire to identify one entity, or one person, as a saviour of sorts, who can cope with a variety of challenges and can serve as a role model for us all. Hero worship is at the basis of the major monotheist religions, and it has also informed the style of literature known as ‘the epic’. The epic narrates the great achievements of one particular hero, such as Homer’s Odysseus, and shuns the contribution of other protagonists. The epic of international law obviously casts the state as the hero and minimizes—at least in its traditional incarnation—the contributions of NSAs.

The epic was the dominant literary style in earlier times. However, it has been largely overtaken by ‘the novel’, a style in which a variety of characters, and not just one hero, play a role. Think, for instance, of Charles Dickens’s acclaimed novel ‘A Tale of Two Cities’ (1859), set against the background of the French Revolution.Footnote 3 This book has not one, but three main characters, a French aristocrat and a British lawyer who falls in love with the Frenchman’s wife. While the Brit finally offers his own life instead of the Frenchman’s on the gallows, the important takeaway is not that the Brit is the hero, but that a variety of protagonists enter the stage. This speaks to a reality of pluralism, with a number of rather different actors playing their part in the story.

In literary theory, it is to his credit that the Russian literary critic Mikhail Bakhtin examined these genres of the epic and the novel, using the terms ‘monoglossia’ and ‘heteroglossia’—denoting respectively the one-person and multiple-person narratives.Footnote 4 Bakhtin has proved quite influential in semiotics, anthropology and communication studies. However, recently his work has also been discovered by scholars of law and governance, most notably by Mariana Valverde, a critical theorist of scale and temporality who recently published the Bakhtin-inspired Chronotopes of the Law.Footnote 5 Valverde makes, inter alia, the point that the law, including international law, is a monoglossia centred around the state and that it is the task of the critical scholar to debunk myths of the state, and to find space for non-state counter-narratives, or heteroglossia.

Let us be honest, debunking myths and imagining new realities is not the forte of international lawyers steeped in the positivist tradition. We have been taught—and we teach—that international law is what states make of it. We meekly refer and defer to the list of sources of international law in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ)—which all put the state at the centre of attention. A critical scholar may however want to inquire why the state has cast such a spell, and whether there are, or should be, juridical openings for NSAs within the state system.

Historicizing the international legal system is a first step in this regard. We should remember that imagining the body politic along territorial, state lines is the result of a historically contingent confluence of a variety of material and epistemic factors in the early modern period.Footnote 6 Medieval times indeed presented us with a heteroglossian social reality, with a variety of territorial and non-territorial actors exercising power. Kings vied for power with local lords, with the Pope and with cities whose merchants engaged in long-distance trade. Territorial, ‘state’ norms existed alongside non-state norms, such as the lex mercatoria, canon law or the legal practices of the guilds. Legal allegiances were not exclusive to the state but were overlapping. In the 16th century, however, the emergence of the science of cartography allowed secular rulers to draw more detailed boundaries, an event that entrenched the power of the state and of territorial law. Branch’s (2013) narrative of this historic trail is well worth reading in this regard.Footnote 7

For our purposes, it is crucial to understand that the state gradually crowded out non-state jurisdictional orders which could not easily be ‘mapped’ in the technical sense of the word. The year 1648 is typically cited as a key moment; the Peace of Westphalia, allegedly for the first time in history, defined the international community as a community of states, endowed with full external and internal sovereignty. This Peace did away with ‘transnational’ allegiances and incorporated rights and properties within the territorial jurisdiction and sovereignty of the state.Footnote 8 The heyday of the state would then follow in the 19th century, when a movement emerged to channel nationalist sentiment through the territorial nation state.

3 Heteroglossia: A Continuous Role for Non-State Actors in the International System

While the state, with its monoglossian ambitions, has gradually entrenched its power and captured legal and political scholars’ imagination, the reality of international life has actually been different. Even in our post-16th century Modern Age, NSAs have continued to play roles in international affairs.Footnote 9 In the 17th century, the East India Companies, while perhaps not fully operating independently from the state, wielded enormous private economic power, having the monopoly on overseas trade with the colonies. They can be considered as the precursors of the modern-day multinational corporations.Footnote 10 In the late 18th century, anti-slavery societies in the United Kingdom and the United States started to militate against the slave trade, eventually successfully. They can be considered as the first non-governmental organizations (NGOs).Footnote 11 In the 19th and early 20th century, peace movements were instrumental in the establishment of arbitral tribunals and ultimately the League of Nations.Footnote 12 At the same time, women’s associations, attacking male-dominated state hierarchies, managed to empower women—admittedly an ongoing struggle. And the 19th century recognition of belligerency conferred a measure of legal personality on insurgents, thereby foreshadowing the current legal international humanitarian law status of non-state armed groups in non-international armed conflicts.

The World Court has also played its part in this respect. While the Court (in its incarnations of the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) and the ICJ) is considered as a state-centred mechanism par excellence, it is recalled that its recognition of NSAs’ legal status has not been marginal. In the 1928 Beamtenabkommen case, for instance, a case concerning the railway personnel of Danzig, the PCIJ held that ‘the very object of an international agreement, according to the intention of the contracting Parties, may be the adoption by the Parties of some definite rules creating individual rights and enforceable by the national courts’.Footnote 13 In so doing, it confirmed that international law could create rights for individuals. Also, in two other cases involving Poland, Minority Schools and German Settlers, the PCIJ ruled that the object of a treaty (in the case the League of Nations’ Minority Treaties) could be the protection of individual rights.Footnote 14 Just after the Second World War, as is well known, the newly established ICJ issued the famous Reparation advisory opinion, in which it confirmed that there could be more subjects of international law than just states.Footnote 15 While the case concerned international organizations, its dictum could just as well apply to other NSAs; they could be endowed with international legal personality insofar as this would satisfy the needs of the international community, at least as so perceived by states.

The term international legal person—although widely used in international law circles, especially after the Reparation opinion—has little analytical purchase in itself, however. It is not an a priori threshold that needs to be crossed before an NSA can enjoy rights or obligations under international law. Rather, an NSA enjoys international legal personality because it enjoys certain obligations. The focus of the inquiry should thus simply be on whether an international norm creates rights or obligations for an actor, and when this is indeed the case, the addressee of the norm can be considered as an international legal person. Thus, when we say that an NSA is a subject of international law, it simply means that it enjoys certain rights and/or obligations under international law.

This brief overview shows us that the international legal system, as also further developed by the World Court, has been more heteroglossian than meets the untrained eye. There are, and may be, other subjects of international law than only states, possessing international rights and obligations of a variable nature and scope. It remains, however, that such rights and obligations are almost exclusively created by states, albeit for NSAs. States thus remain the gatekeepers of the international legal system; they decide who is in and who is out. A fine example is Article 71 United Nations (UN) Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Committee which decides on the accreditation of NGOs with ECOSOC; this Committee is composed of only states—a state of affairs which surely deserves criticism. So after all, heteroglossia may be more imaginary than real. States, or states assembled in international organizations, are still pulling the strings, and arguably only accept NSAs insofar as these serve the purposes of the state or organization. As Kenneth Anderson has pointed out, the UN has accepted NGOs with open arms to shore up its own legitimacy (but as NGOs are lacking legitimacy themselves, this may come down to a lovers’ embrace of death).Footnote 16 States for their part have merrily supported NGOs which serve as force multipliers for the state’s political agenda, with states sometimes setting up their own government-organized NGOs (GONGOs).Footnote 17 And investors’ rights under international law have only been enhanced because investors’ home states have concluded bilateral investment treaties containing these very rights.

Small wonder, then, that some scholars have advocated taking heteroglossia seriously, by giving primary agency to all international actors. The New Haven School’s characterization of international law, as a process of authoritative decision-making by a variety of interested actors rather than as a set of rigid rules, is the most well known in this respect.Footnote 18 This School does away with a formal notion of international legal subjectivity and emphasizes how actors materially participate in the creation of rules considered as authoritative although perhaps not necessarily binding in an Article 38 ICJ Statute sense.Footnote 19 Philip Jessup’s Transnational Law also fits this mould; it collapses the distinction between the public and the private and gives legal agency to all transnationally active actors.Footnote 20

These truly heteroglossian approaches, while influential in critical scholarship, have nevertheless failed to enter the mainstream. That being said, what is undeniable is that a panoply of actors play in role in global governance. The term global governance itself has even been invented to denote governance beyond the state: governance by, or at least including, NSAs.Footnote 21 What this means for legal normativity is another question, however. We turn to this question in the next section.

4 The Role of Non-State Actors in Contemporary International Law-Making, Compliance-Monitoring, and Dispute-Settlement

Most international lawyers with a positivist bent would not deny the important role played by NSAs in the functioning of the current international legal system, but they consider their impact on law-making, compliance-monitoring, and dispute-settlement largely as the outcome of a two-level game.Footnote 22 This means that NSAs do not have a direct impact on international law-creation but they are free to influence the actual law-making agencies: states. Law-applying agencies will normally not take issue with how state or organizational authoritative decision-making has come into being. A rare counter-example is ICJ Judges Guillaume and Oda’s criticism of the UN General Assembly resolution requesting the ICJ to give an advisory opinion on the use of nuclear weapons in 1996, on the ground that NGOs were behind this resolution.Footnote 23 However, by and large international law and its appliers black-box the preference formation within states or international organizations.

Examples of how NSAs have influenced state preferences are not hard to come by: just think of the outlawing of the slave trade in the 19th century, the creation of the International Criminal Court, or the adoption of conventions on landmines and cluster munitions. Article 71 of the UN Charter has even been explicitly adopted to enable NGOs to impact on the policy-setting and norm-setting process within the UN. Notably international relations scholars adhering to the constructivist school have well theorized such norm cascades, consisting of local NGOs teaming up with international NGOs so as to convince states or organizations to espouse civil society values and/or bring pressure to bear on recalcitrant states.Footnote 24

Whether NSAs can also play one-level games in international law-making and policy-making is a different matter. Still, as a matter of positive law, it is hard to deny the role played by employers’ and workers’ associations in the International Labour Organization,Footnote 25 the treaty-making practice of the Holy See,Footnote 26 or the legal value of International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) agreements concluded with states.Footnote 27 It is a more controversial proposition, however, that agreements concluded by armed opposition groups and statesFootnote 28 are governed by international law, that the practice of NSAs counts towards the formation of customary international law,Footnote 29 or that transnational private regulation,Footnote 30 or multi-stakeholder initiativesFootnote 31 can give rise to international obligations properly speaking. It is doubtful whether we should allow NSAs to play even more one-level games, e.g., whether one should invite NGOs to the international negotiation table. Practical problems and concerns over legitimacy militate against enhancing the law-making capacities of NSAs.

NSAs have not only participated in international law-making games but have also contributed or, more accurately, been allowed to contribute to monitoring compliance with international law. NSA compliance-monitoring can be formal—e.g. when it is provided for in a treaty or when NGO representatives form part of a compliance or inspection committee—or informal, when NGOs simply name and shame governments, armed groups, or corporations. It has a vertical dimension where NGOs monitor state compliance and a horizontal one where NSAs monitor other NSAs’ compliance without state mediation. The latter dimension is surely innovative. The efforts of Geneva Call can be mentioned in this respect,Footnote 32 as can the role of NGOs in auditing corporations’ human rights record. Consumer and investor pressure, e.g., the divestment regarding the fossil fuel industry,Footnote 33 shows how market forces can also enforce compliance with public values.Footnote 34 The operation of the market diminishes the role of the state in compliance-monitoring, as individuals no longer need to cast a ballot when they want politics to change; they can simply vote with their shopping trolley or through their shareholder activism.

As far as NSA participation in dispute-settlement mechanisms is concerned, the picture somewhat resembles the games played in law-making. Without the pressure of discrete NSAs, some state-to-state contentious proceedings would not have been brought, e.g., the Whaling case before the ICJ,Footnote 35 or, in the case of the World Trade Organization (WTO) Dispute Settlement Mechanism, the majority of cases would not have taken place.Footnote 36 This is a two-level game, with states running errands for influential NSAs. In contrast, opportunities for direct intervention by NSAs in pending international law disputes are somewhat more circumscribed. The ICJ does not allow such intervention, although, in advisory proceedings, states can refer to written documents and statements submitted by NSAs to the Court.Footnote 37 Trade and investment tribunals, as well as domestic courts in some jurisdictions, may for their part allow NGOs to file amicus curiae briefs in limited circumstances.Footnote 38 A major breakthrough in international law is obviously the creation of direct access rights for NSA in some areas of international law—notably human rights and investment law—which makes them no longer dependent on the mechanism of diplomatic protection. Sometimes, states are also willing to conclude an arbitration agreement with NSAs.Footnote 39 Furthermore, as these days international law issues are being litigated much more frequently in domestic courts, it is worth mentioning that NSAs concerned about international issues may in some national jurisdictions have standing to initiate proceedings single-handedly. For instance, in 2015, Dutch NGO Urgenda successfully brought a case before a Dutch court against the Dutch Government for failing to meet its international obligations to sufficiently reduce greenhouse gas emissions.Footnote 40 Also in 2015, the Polisario Front, a national liberation movement fighting for the self-determination of the Sahrawi people in the Western Sahara, was granted standing before the Court of Justice of the European Union (EU) and successfully argued that an EU-Morocco free trade agreement violated the right to self-determination of the Sahrawi people.Footnote 41

5 Obligations and Responsibility of Non-State Actors

In the previous section, we discussed the (participatory) rights of NSAs in law-making, compliance-monitoring, and dispute-settlement. An NSA’s international legal personality is however also a function of the NSA bearing international obligations, and having its international responsibility engaged. It should be emphasized that this ‘debit side’ of legal personality does not necessarily correlate with the ‘credit side’ of participatory rights; an NSA could well incur obligations under a norm of international law, even if it has not participated in the formation of that norm.Footnote 42 Whether NSAs incur obligations under international law is, just like with rights, a matter of construing the relevant international norm, typically made by states.Footnote 43 Accordingly, there is no general theory on NSA international obligations; their scope and extent depend on the specific regime and the actor in question.

Direct NSA obligations exist, but they are certainly not widespread. They exist for armed groups under humanitarian law treatiesFootnote 44 and for deep seabed mining corporations under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.Footnote 45 More often than not, NSA obligations are just indirect: the treaty imposes obligations on states to regulate NSAs.Footnote 46 Such NSA obligations then arise under domestic rather than international law. A normative or political question is whether extending such obligations is desirable. As is known, a major debate has been going on regarding whether corporations incur, or rather should incur, obligations under international human rights law, with the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights having settled the matter for non-legal duties.Footnote 47 A similar debate is going on regarding the human rights obligations of armed groups, although some scholars claim that such obligations already exist as a matter of positive international law.Footnote 48

Once obligations have been established, the subsequent question is whether NSAs’ international responsibility can be engaged for violations of international law. In early discussions within the NSA Committee of the International Law Association, some members suggested to draw up draft articles along the lines of the International Law Commission’s (ILC) Articles on the Responsibility of States and International Organizations for Internationally Wrongful Acts. However, this idea was abandoned because of the limited primary obligations of NSAs, the sheer absence of relevant practice on responsibility, and the heterogeneity of the actors involved. Aspects of responsibility—in particular attribution and reparations—have so far mainly been theorized with respect to armed groups, e.g., can a terrorist act of an Islamic State (IS) sympathizer be attributed to IS or is the FARC under an obligation to make reparations to victims of its wrongful acts?Footnote 49

6 Where Does This Leave the State?

The current legal landscape shows an empowerment of NSAs, a heteroglossian reality, but where does it leave the initial hero in the story: the state? In fact, from an international law perspective, the state can hardly be said to disappear. Firstly, NSA rights and obligations under international law do not emerge ex nihilo; they are granted by states, in their capacity as the quasi-exclusive law-makers in international law. Second, the scope of states’ own obligations and rights is expanding rather than contracting. The state has increased due diligence obligations to ensure that NSAs over which it can exercise influence (e.g. corporations) comply with international law—as the Guiding Principles have reminded us.Footnote 50 Also, the classic principles of the attribution of private acts to the state continue to apply.Footnote 51 And to counter the threat posed by undesirable NSAs, states have carved out a legal space to exercise self-defence not just against states but also against the NSAs themselves, insofar as these have found a safe haven on another state’s territory.Footnote 52 Similarly, states have pushed the boundaries of international humanitarian law to justify the targeted killings of terrorist NSAs in a seemingly eternal war on terror.Footnote 53

From an international governance perspective, the state has similarly not disappeared, but rather it has repurposed itself.Footnote 54 The state may have abandoned command and control regulation and may satisfy itself with orchestrating and facilitating private initiative.Footnote 55 For instance, states could support private, corporate grievance mechanisms by setting minimum standards to be met, and to provide a safety net when the private mechanism fails to deliver. This repurposing of the state also plays out at the purely domestic level, e.g., in the Netherlands, where the ‘participation society’ has replaced the welfare state; for obvious financial reasons, the state expects its citizens to care for themselves and their surroundings, while offering enabling incentives.Footnote 56 Ultimately, how much state and non-state governance we want is a political question; a smart mix of both may be desirable.

Let me finally flag that some autocratic jurisdictions do not seem to opt for such an orderly retreat or repurposing of the state. Instead, they maintain, or even strengthen their totalitarian ambitions.Footnote 57 Also in multilateral settings, emerging powers emphasize traditional principles of state sovereignty and non-intervention, and they are wary of empowering civil society.Footnote 58

7 Concluding Observations

I have shown in this brief article that the participation of NSAs in global governance is a heteroglossian reality, even if the presence of the state continues to loom large. International law or, more accurately, the community of states has responded in a piecemeal fashion to this reality by conferring certain rights and obligations on categories of NSAs. Whether this has been done adequately is a different question altogether. I would venture to say that we do not need a world-scale theory to make sense of the international legal personality of the generic category of ‘the non-state actor’. Rather, a functionally differentiated legal regime tailored to the specific actor and its activities is called for. Scholars may want to inquire whether the current and envisaged regimes are sufficiently guided by the principles of legitimacy, accountability, transparency, and effectiveness. Modesty is in the end also called for. As international lawyers, we may have to resist the temptation to cast all international social relationships in public international law terms or even in legal terms to begin with. We should not exclude the possibility that transnational regimes may function effectively via domestic regulation, non-state multi-stakeholder regulation, or without any regulation whatsoever. However, where these alternative regulatory solutions do not deliver, international law may well be the default option.