: ''The phrase 'Hague Tribunal' can also be used to refer to
ICTY.''
The 'Permanent Court of Arbitration' ('PCA'), also known as the 'Hague Tribunal' is an
international organization based in
The Hague in the
Netherlands. It was established in
1899 as one of the acts of the first
Hague Peace Conference, which makes it the oldest institution for international dispute resolution. As of 2006, 106 countries were party to the treaty. The Court deals in cases submitted to it by consent of the parties involved and handles cases between countries and between countries and private parties.
The PCA is housed in the
Peace Palace in
The Hague, which was built specially for the Court in
1913 with an endowment from the
Carnegie Foundation. From
1922 on, the building also housed the distinctly separate Permanent Court of International Justice, which later became the
International Court of Justice in
1946.
Unlike the
International Court of Justice, the PCA is not an inter-state court. Parties may apply here for arbitration, mediation or examination of the facts. Unlike the ICJ, the Court is not just open to states but also to other parties. Organisations, private enterprises and even private individuals may apply here to resolve a dispute with a state.
The seeds of thought that led to the creation of the PCA were planted in the
United States. Annual meetings were conducted by the
Lake Mohonk Conference on International Arbitration, beginning in 1895, in New York State at the
Mohonk Mountain House hotel.
The public at large is usually more familiar with the International Court of Justice than with the Permanent Court of Arbitration. The fact that people are relatively unfamiliar with the PCA is due to the few number of cases dealt with between 1946 and 1990 and the closed nature of the cases. Hearings are hardly ever open to the public and sometimes even the decision itself is kept confidential at the request of the parties. The last couple of years the popularity of the PCA is increasing again. The border dispute between
Ethiopia and
Eritrea was one of the big cases in 2003 that put the existence of the PCA back into the international limelight.
In close cooperation with the PCA, the
Hague Justice Portal, an academic gateway to information, news and research on The Hague organisations in the fields of international peace, justice and security, offers access to historic
PCA awards in digital format.
External links
★
PCA website
★
Hague Justice Portal