Acceptance and implementation of International Treaties in the Afghan Legal System (dari)
Abstract
reaty relations are essential to contemporary international life, and Afghanistan has acceded to numerous instruments; yet domestic execution remains inconsistent. This article examines how treaties are accepted and implemented within Afghanistan’s legal order, mapping constitutional and statutory mechanisms (e.g., Article 7 of the Constitution and the Law on Treaties) governing signature, ratification, oversight, and judicial review. It finds persistent normative ambiguity about the rank of treaties vis-à-vis the Constitution and ordinary statutes, a hybrid monist–dualist practice, and weak institutional habits: courts seldom cite treaties, ministries lack clear procedures, and reservations are uneven. These gaps risk international responsibility and erode legal certainty. Drawing on comparative practice, the study recommends clarifying the hierarchy of norms through constitutional or interpretive guidance; adopting systematic implementing legislation; empowering the Supreme Court and the Commission for Supervision of the Implementation of the Constitution to guide courts; strengthening MFA monitoring; and building capacity for judges and officials. Effective implementation is both a legal duty and a prerequisite for credible international engagement.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Afghan Legal Studies

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.