Abstract

Abstract The conclusion summarises the key components that support the existence of a new special regime around serious violations of human rights—the substantive component, the monitoring component, the enforcement component, and the remedial component—and provides an overview of their principal elements. It further identifies other areas of international law that provide parts of potential additional components to the regime—such as arms trade or business and human rights frameworks. Lastly, it reflects on the use of the expression ‘serious violations of human rights’ as a standard in international practice, and on the possible alternative developments—become synonym to international crimes or remain just a standard in treaty provisions—that may determine the use of the expression in the international legal order.

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