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This chapter evaluates the socially constructed meaning of the legal significance of resolutions at the adoption stage. It provides an empirical analysis, both quantitative and qualitative, of the relationship between the content of selected resolutions and the level of state support for those resolutions with a view to facilitating the discovery of emergent analytics – that is to say, key concepts shedding light on the scope, limits and intensity of the perceived binding character of resolutions at the adoption stage. The contention is that the text of resolutions cannot be taken at face value, hence it is not determinative of the legal significance of resolutions. It demonstrates that the concept of legal significance of resolutions at the adoption stage is determined by the characteristics of the General Assembly as a self-contained political system. It is therefore likely to differ from the concept of legal significance at the implementation stage.
This chapter provides an overview of the General Assembly’s decision-making powers and related functions. The UN Charter describes resolutions of the General Assembly as recommendations. However, the letter of the UN Charter does not exclude the possibility that resolutions may acquire legal significance, which is a matter of empirical assessment. The chapter then analyses seven decades of General Assembly practice. Based on an original dataset, it sheds light on the working methods and practices informing the functioning of the General Assembly in plenary session as well as its six main committees. For each of them, it provides information about the number of resolutions adopted, their subject matter and voting patterns. The empirical analysis is useful to shed light on the degree of autonomy of the General Assembly from its member states through the analysis of the body of practice developed by both the plenary session and its six main committees. Building on the empirical findings, the chapter elaborates on the concept of autonomy of the General Assembly and its connection with the process through which resolutions acquire legal significance. It concludes by pointing out that it is not possible to generalize about the functioning of the General Assembly and, consequently, the legal significance of resolutions.
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