A/HRC/58/54
the minority group and the dominant group.40 The present thematic report demonstrates that
such an end can be achieved through the full respect of the identity of persons belonging to
minority groups.
D.
The right to identity in international law
50.
For the three levels of identity that were identified as relevant for minority issues (see
para. 44 above), there is quite a differentiated situation as regards references to identity in
international law. There is a clear disposition of positive law as regards individual identity in
article 8 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Gender identity is also a recognized
concept of international law (even though it has not yet been translated into a positive law
provision), at least since the Human Rights Council appointed an independent expert on
protection against violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender
identity.41 With regard to collective identities, references can be found in non-binding legal
instruments (such as the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic,
Religious and Linguistic Minorities or the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural
Diversity). There is, however, no reference to national identity in international law. 42
Nevertheless, national identity is an important feature for most States in the world, also to be
taken into account in international relations. The present section will therefore examine the
right of States to identity and the right to individual identity. As we have seen, as they are not
legal persons in international law, minorities cannot be rights-holders; however, minority
identity results from the combined exercise of the specific right to identity by persons
belonging to minorities, on the one hand, and the recognition and protection of that identity
by the State in accordance with article 1 of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons
Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities, on the other.
1.
The right of States to a national identity
51.
States sovereignly define their identity in founding documents, most commonly taking
the form of a constitution. States are problematic legal objects. States are legal persons,
meaning they do not exist as natural persons, but only exist according to law (see para. 40
above). The difficulty with States is that they are at the foundation of both a specific national
legal order (and therefore cannot be defined by this national legal order before it exists) and
of international law. Further, a State cannot be created within an existing legal order, as it
would then not be a sovereign entity (a defining characteristic of statehood) since its existence
would find its root in another State’s legal order. Nor can a State be created according to
international law, since international law is the product of States’ interactions. Therefore,
States precede the international legal order, which is why States, despite being legal persons,
are not defined, but only recognized, by other international law subjects. The only option is
for States to define themselves, including by adopting and promoting an identity, which then
singularizes and defines them, both domestically and internationally. In other words, a State’s
identity directly arises from the right to self-determination.43
40
41
42
43
10
Ibid., paras. 37–41.
See Human Rights Council resolution 32/2.
With the exception of the Treaty on European Union, article 4 (2) of which reads in part: “The Union
shall respect the equality of Member States before the Treaties as well as their national identities,
inherent in their fundamental structures, political and constitutional, inclusive of regional and local
self-government.” However, most European law academics consider European Union law to be of a
different nature than international law, since the publication of the seminal work of Pierre Pescatore,
Le droit de l’intégration : émergence d’un phénomène nouveau dans les relations internationales
selon l’expérience des Communautés européennes (Leiden, Kingdom of the Netherlands, Sïjthoff,
1972).
As the General Assembly asserted in 1970 in the Declaration on Principles of International Law
concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations (resolution 2625 (XXV)): “The establishment of a sovereign and independent State,
the free association or integration with an independent State or the emergence into any other political
status freely determined by a people constitute modes of implementing the right of self-determination
by that people.”
GE.25-00509