mport, Export, and Regional Consent in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
Abstract
The Inter–American Court of Human Rights has elaborated a significant body of human rights jurisprudence through interpretation of regional human rights conventions and the adaptation of European and global precedents and global soft law. The Inter–American Court has also aspired to have an influence outside its region by offering innovative interpretations of human rights and by identifying norms as jus cogens. The Court’s methodology in recent years has appeared to give insufficient consideration to the consent of the regional community of states as a factor in the evolutive interpretation of a human rights treaty. The article illustrates and criticizes that trend, and contends that greater attention to evidence of regional consent could improve the acceptance and effective ness of the Inter–American human rights system.