Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA)

GS2 – International Relations

About PCA
  • Established: 1899, through the Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes.
  • Headquarters: The Hague, Netherlands.
  • Nature: An intergovernmental organization providing a permanent forum for arbitration and other dispute resolution between States, State entities, intergovernmental organizations, and private parties.
  • Membership: 122 member states (including India).
Functions
  • Facilitates arbitration, conciliation, mediation, and fact-finding for resolving disputes.
  • Handles disputes involving:
    • Territorial and maritime boundaries.
    • Sovereignty issues.
    • International trade and investment.
    • Human rights and environmental law.
  • Provides administrative support for arbitral tribunals constituted for specific disputes.
Structure
  1. Administrative Council: Composed of representatives of member states; oversees policies.
  2. International Bureau (Registry): Secretariat providing support to arbitration processes.
  3. Panel of Arbitrators: Each member state nominates up to 4 persons of known competence in international law for appointment in arbitral tribunals.
India & PCA
  • India is a member and has been a party in several cases:
    • Indus Waters Kishenganga Arbitration (2010–2013).
    • Enrica Lexie (Italian Marines) case (2015–2020).
    • India–Bangladesh Maritime Boundary Dispute (2009–2014) – PCA upheld Bangladesh’s claim to over 19,000 sq. km. of disputed area.
Difference from ICJ
  • PCA: Provides arbitration services, parties must consent to arbitration. Flexible and case-specific.
  • ICJ: Principal judicial organ of the UN with binding jurisdiction over disputes between states.
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