The 'International Commission of Jurists' (ICJ) is an international
human rights non-governmental organisation. The Commission itself is a standing group of 60 eminent jurists (judges and lawyers), including members of the senior judiciary in Australia, Canada, and South Africa and the former
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,
Mary Robinson.
The Commission is supported by an International Secretariat based in
Geneva,
Switzerland, and staffed by lawyers drawn from a wide range of jurisdictions and legal traditions. The Secretariat and the Commission undertake advocacy and policy work aimed at strengthening the role of lawyers and judges in protecting and promoting human rights and the rule of law. In addition, the ICJ has national sections and affiliates in over 70 countries. Given the legal focus of the ICJ's work, membership of these sections is predominantly drawn from the legal profession:
lawyers,
judges, legal academics and law students.
The initials of the International Commission of Jurists are the same as those of the
International Court of Justice. Given their common legal context, the two are sometimes confused with one another, although they are unrelated.
History
Born at the ideological frontline of a divided post-war Berlin, the ICJ was established in memory of a West German lawyer, Dr. Walter Linse, who, along with Dr. Theo Friedlander, was active in exposing human rights violations committed in the Soviet zone. On
8 July 1952, East German intelligence agents abducted and delivered Linse to the
KGB and Dr Linse was executed in
Moscow one year later for "espionage". This event led to the decision by a group of lawyers to found an organisation dedicated to the defence of human rights through the rule of law and its inaugural conference was convened in 1952. Today, the ICJ has national sections and affiliates in over 70 countries.
The ICJ was responsible for the
Declaration of Delhi on the
rule of law in
1959.
Current activities
The ICJ is active in promoting human rights and the rule of law, whether at the international level (e.g. the UN), regionally (e.g. the EU and Council of Europe), or domestically through the activities of its national sections (e.g.
JUSTICE in the UK). It currently operates programmes on the independence of judges and lawyers, the human rights impact of counter-terrorism legislation, the role of human rights in international corporate responsibility, and economic social and cultural rights.
External links
★
Official site