‘Soft Law’ in the Mechanism of the International and National Protection of the Constitutional Electoral Rights

The publication explores the phenomenology and content of ‘soft law’ in the inter­ national and national law and reveals the designation of ‘soft law’ in protecting the electoral rights of the citizens. ‘Soft law’ is intended to mean optional interna­ tional documents, most of which are resolutions of the intergovernmental organi­ sations containing statements, commitments, guidelines, common positions or statements on policy or intentions. ‘Soft law’ documents are usually adopted by the statutory bodies of the international organisations on issues that reflect new problems, tendencies or trends in the field of electoral law, for which there is no political will or the accordance of all the member states in the form of a classical international treaty. When it comes to the content, the ‘soft law’ documents are all kinds of state­ ments, obligations, guidelines, codes of conduct, codes of ethics, guidelines and standards, common positions or statements of policy or intentions.


Introduction
The dogma of the international customs and international treaties as sources of the public international law is well known. Thus, as early as at the beginning of the 20th century, the Professor P. Kazanskiy wrote in his textbook Introduction to the Course of International Law: 4 'The rapidly growing practice of interstate treaties demonstrates that the future belongs not to the custom, but to the treaty of the people.' However, the 20th century was marked not only by the triumph of the international treaties, but also by the emergence of a new kind of sources of the international law -'soft law' documents that became a true phenomenon of the modern international law.
In the 21st century, the 'soft law' is becoming more and more recognised in the system of the international sources of electoral law, and its documents are recognised as a universal and effective instrument for the implementation of the international electoral standards and the protection of the electoral rights of the citizens of the EU member states, the United States and many other countries. 'Soft law' documents harmoniously complement the socalled 'hard international law' and make the international human rights mechanisms more flexible. Applying the right documents is increasingly responsive to the new challenges faced by parti cular states or regions in organising and holding elections and, in accordance with the principles of democracy, to protect the electoral rights of their citizens. In this sense, the view of the German scientist and diplomat H. Hillgenberg is correct, who states: 'International agreements not concluded as treaties and therefore not covered by the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties play an important role in interna tional relations. Often states prefer non-treaty obligations as a simpler and more flexible foundation for their future relations.' 5 The practice of applying 'soft law' in the international and national law has attracted the attention of scholars from around the world to this issue. In particular, the American researcher A. Robilant seeks to establish the origin of the 'soft law' phenomenon in the international law. 6 The American scholars Andrew T. Guzman and Timothy L. Meyer examine the nature of 'soft law' in the system of contem 4 P. Kazanskiy, Introduction to the Course of International Law, Odessa 1901, p. 148. 5 H. Hillgenberg, A fresh look at soft law, "European Journal of International Law" 1999, 10(3), p. 499. 'soFt laW' In the mechanIsm oF the InternatIonal and natIonal… 181 porary international law and its relationship to 'hard law '. 7 The German scholar H. Hillgenberg examines the issue of the international organisations and states as subjects of the international law and the reason of their resort to the application of the 'soft law' documents while there is a number of 'hard law' instruments in the international law. 8 The Chinese researcher B. Druzin attempts to answer the question Why Does Soft Law Have Any Power Anyway? 9 The team of authors G. Falkner, O. Treib, M. Hartlapp and S. Leiber consider 'soft law' through the lens of the harmo nisation of the law of the EU member states with the law of the European Union. 10 The Ukrainian lawyer D. Terletskiy considers the phenomenon of 'soft law' in the context of its combination with the constitutional norms in practical applica tion. 11 Critical views on the 'soft law' mission in regulating relationships can be traced to the work by the Finnish scholar J. Klabbers. 12 The French researcher M. Lancri explores the issues of the international standards which are reflected in the 'soft law' documents, transformed into international legal norms of 'hard law'. 13 Another French scholar O. Ştefan studies the application of the 'soft law' documents in the practice of the European courts. 14 The Italian scientists C. Fasone Fedorenko, Civil (Personal) Rights and Liberties in Ukraine: Notions, System, and Problems of their Establishing, "Prawa człowieka. Humanistyczne Zeszyty Naukowe" 2015, 18, pp. 45-64;idem, 182 VladyslaV Fedorenko, Volodymyr nesteroVych The issue of 'soft law' and its application in the field of electoral law has also been addressed in a number of official documents by the international global and regio nal organisations and supranational associations. For instance, the EU Compendium of International Standards for Elections states: 'Nontreaty standards are usually adopted by the highest decisionmaking bodies of international organizations concerning issues that reflect new concerns or developments on which the political will to conclude a legally binding treaty is insufficient, or the matter is of such a nature that the adoption of non-treaty standards is better suited for the intended purpose. Nontreaty standards can, however, be used as interpretative tools in establishing the contents of a particular treaty standard, and they can be considered to be indicative of emerging trends in international law '. 17 Thus, the analysis of the above-mentioned scientific works of jurists from different foreign countries of Europe, America and Asia leads to the conclusion that numerous scientific explorations of the 'soft law' phenomenology did not complete the formation of a coherent theory of its influence on law-making and law-enforcement activity, including human rights. In particular, the issue of the appointment of 'soft law' in the international and national constitutional legal mechanism of promoting the values and standards of democracy in the context of the protection of citizens' electoral law is in need of substantiation today.
In addition, the lawmaking and lawenforcement practice in the area of elec toral rights speaks of the high demand for 'soft law' documents for the national and international courts, election administration bodies, NGOs and other entities. Especially when it comes to the protection of the electoral rights on new and sensi tive issues, for which common approaches have not yet been established in the in ternational treaties and acts of the national law. Therefore, at present, a rather acute question has arisen not only about the theoretical generalisations about the legal nature of soft law' in the international and national law, but also about the elabora tion of practical recommendations for the application of the soft law' in the protection of the courts and administrative bodies and NGOs in the exercise of the citizens' electoral rights.

Essential Features of 'Soft Law' Documents in the Field of Electoral Law
Modern international 'soft law' documents in the field of electoral rights are characterised by the following qualifications. 1. In their essence, that is, the origin of the 'soft law' documents, they generally embody the agreed valuebased position of international organisations (UN, OSCE, CoE, etc.) and their statutory bodies (PACE, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, the European Commission for Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission), the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), etc.) on issues relating to the promotion of democracy in the organisation and conduct of elections and the protection of the electoral rights of the citizens, and which cannot be settled in inter national agreements without the political will of all the member states. 2. In their content that is subject to regulation, 'soft law' documents in the field of electoral law are aimed at affirming the ideals and values of the electoral democracy during the organisation and holding of elections, particularly, the validity of the current electoral legislation and the prohibition to change it for specific elections, as well as to protect the electoral rights of the citizens and prevent discrimination against them. The notion of the content of the 'soft law' regulation is even given by  (2006)018) and others. 3. According to the form, the international 'soft law' documents in the field of electoral rights are objectified in declarations, guidelines, codes, conclusions, standards, joint statements, reports, etc. At the same time, 'soft law' in the area of electoral law includes not only legal norms, but also political, moral, ethical and other norms which are not peculiar to the classical international treaties. 4. By law, the 'soft law' documents on electoral democracy are advisory. As a result, they do not require the consent of their national parliaments in the form of ratification because they are not formally considered international treaties.
184 VladyslaV Fedorenko, Volodymyr nesteroVych Obviously, the advisory nature of the 'soft law' documents is that they are better suited to protect the electoral rights of the citizens. In particular, the 'soft law' documents are quite frequently used by courts and quasi-judicial authorities, especially election administration bodies (multilevel election commissions, CDLAD(2004)003, etc.), in resolving electoral disputes in two cases: firstly, as a tool to interpret when establishing the content of a particular electoral standard which is specified in a binding international treaty; secondly, as an additional argument that reinforces the position of protecting the electoral rights of the citizens, which takes place in the event of their violation or doubt regarding the interpretation of the scope and boundaries of the respective electoral rights of the citizens. 5. The adoption and formulation of the content of the international 'soft law' documents are significantly influenced by the expert environment, in the form of non-governmental organisations and think-tanks operating in the field of electoral law and monitoring the citizens' electoral rights. 6. By their purpose, the international 'soft law' documents are clearly integra tive in the system of sources of the international and national electoral law. They are closely related to the content of 'hard law' and functionally interact with the international instruments of that 'hard law' -international treaties and conventions which enshrine the electoral rights of the citizens and prevent any discrimination in their implementation. It is quite frequently that the process of approving new international electoral standards begins with their initial consolidation in the international 'soft law' documents. After the successful validation (with no alternatives) and implementation of the relevant international election standards at the global international and/or regional level, they are formalised in the relevant binding interna tional agreements. More specifically, one argues the conception of the international 'soft law' documents in the field of electoral law and their qualifying features, as an example of the analysis of the relevant domestic and national legislation, as well as the experience of its implementation.
There are five groups of major international 'soft law' documents in the area of electoral law: 1) declarations, recommendations and guidelines which are developed within the framework of the UN statutory bodies and organisations; 2) reports, conclusions, recommendations, codes and principles developed by the European Commission for Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission); 3) resolutions and recommendations of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe; 4) con clusions, recommendations and guidelines of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR); 5) codes of conduct, codes of ethics and 'soFt laW' In the mechanIsm oF the InternatIonal and natIonal… 185 guidelines developed by international nongovernmental organisations in the framework of corporate selfregulation during the election process.
The most famous and most frequently practised international 'soft law' electoral instruments include the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UN General Assembly 1948, 302 (2)

Application of the International 'Soft Law' Documents in the Field of Electoral Law
The legal force of the international 'soft law' documents in the field of electoral law, which has previously been identified as a qualifying criterion, depends primarily on the following factors. Firstly, the more authoritative and numerous in the representation of such documents is an international organisation within which an international 'soft law' document has been adopted, the greater will be its impact on the legislative and enforcement activity at the national level in the area of the electoral law.
Secondly, the more international governmental organisations, international nongovernmental organisations (NGOs), international observation missions, 186 VladyslaV Fedorenko, Volodymyr nesteroVych international programs, thinktanks support the international 'soft law' document, the wider will be its 'enforceable geography'.
Thirdly, the more actively the international 'soft law' document is applied by the national and international courts and government bodies which administer elections in resolving any electoral disputes, the faster it embodies the principles of democracy, and the value of the right of the citizens to elect and to be the elected will first be a desirable and subsequently a mandatory model of conduct in the organisation and conduct of elections.
Concerning the latter statement, the international 'soft law' documents are increasingly being invoked by the international and national judicial authorities in resolving specific electoral disputes.    issued any binding standards for electoral thresholds. The question has not been raised in the organisation's standardsetting texts. On the other hand, the Code of good practice in electoral matters, adopted by the Venice Commission, makes recommendations on the subject (see Venice Commission, "Code of good practice in electoral matters: Guidelines and explanatory report", Opinion no. 190/2002). As a general principle, the Code requires suffrage to be direct, but in the case of a bicameral parliament it permits one of the Chambers to be elected by indirect suffrage. As for the electoral system to be used, the Code's guidelines state that any system may be chosen.' When it comes to the judgment of the case of Muršić v. Croatia of 20 October 2016 (Application No. 7334/13, §19), the ECHR said: 'Evolutive interpretation of the Convention has also led the Court to support its reasoning by reference to norms emanating from other Council of Europe organs, even though those organs have no function of representing States Parties to the Convention, whether supervisory mechanisms or expert bodies. In order to interpret the exact scope of the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Convention, the Court has made use, for example, of the work of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) and the European Commission for Democracy through Law (the Venice Commission) [the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters].' In the judgment of the case of Shindler v. the United Kingdom of 7 May 2013 (Appli cation No. 19840/09, §113), the ECHR noted: 'The Venice Commission Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters 2002 makes reference to the need for certain conditions to be imposed on the right to vote and accepts that a residence requirement may be imposed. It provides that the right to vote "may" be accorded to citizens resident abroad (…).' In the judgment of the case of Petkov and Others v. Bulgaria of 11 June 2009 (Appli cations Nos. 77568/01, 178/02 and 505/02, § §52, 63), the ECHR pointed: 'Finally, the Court observes that an effective system of electoral appeals, as described in the Venice Commission's Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters (see paragraph 52 above), is an important safeguard against arbitrariness in the electoral process.
'soFt laW' In the mechanIsm oF the InternatIonal and natIonal… 189 Failure to abide by final decisions given in response to such appeals undoubtedly undermines the effectiveness of such a system.' In the judgment of the case of Abdalov and Others v. Azerbaijan of 11 July 2019 (Applications Nos. 28508/11 and two others, §95) it was emphasised by the ECHR: 'The Court notes that the Venice Commission's Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters recommends that candidatures be validated by the start of the election campaign, because late validation places some parties and candidates at a disadvantage in the campaign (…).' In the judgment of the case of Communist Party of Russia and Others v. Russia of 19 June 2012 (Application No. 29400/05, §51), the ECHR indicated: 'The European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), at its 51st (Guide lines) and 52nd (Report) sessions on 5-6 July and 18-19 October 2002 adopted the "Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters". The Venice Commission distinguished two particular obligations of the authorities in relation to the media coverage of electoral campaigns: on the one hand to arrange for the candidates and/or parties to be accorded a sufficiently balanced amount of airtime and/or advertising space including on state television channels ("the access to the media obligation") and on the other hand to ensure a "neutral attitude" by state authorities, in particular with regard to the election campaign and coverage by the media, by the publicly owned media ("the neutrality of attitude obligation") (Explanatory Report to the Code of Good Practice on Electoral Matters, §2.3). The Venice Commission's Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters also recommended the creation of an effective system of electoral appeals, among other things, to complain about noncompliance with the rules of access to the media ( §3.3).' The connection between Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters is indicated in the European Court of Human Rights' judgment of the case of Davydov and Others v. Russia of 30 May 2017 (Application No. 75947/11,§285). The ECHR stressed in this judgment: 'It is true that Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 to the Convention was not conceived as a code on electoral matters designed to regulate all aspects of the electoral process (…). However, the Court has already confirmed that the common principles of the European constitutional heritage, which form the basis of any genuinely democratic society, enshrine within themselves the right to vote in terms of the opportunity to cast a vote in universal, equal, free, secret and direct elections held at regular intervals (see the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters, paragraph 196 above).' The Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters is increasingly being applied by the national courts to electoral disputes. For instance, in Ukraine, according to the Unified State Register of Court Decisions, as of 7 February 2020, the administrative 190 VladyslaV Fedorenko, Volodymyr nesteroVych courts of Ukraine issued 43 court decisions in election cases, in which judges, in sub stantiating the position of the court, referred in one way or another to the provisions of the Code of Good Practice in Election Matters (Unified State Register of Court Decisions of Ukraine 2020 18 ). The first decision to which the court applied the provi sions of the said Code was the Resolution of the District Administrative Court of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea of 14 September 2012 (Case No. 2a10148/12/0170/9). In this resolution, the court referred to paragraph 104 of the said Code, according to which 'the quality of the voting and counting systems, as well as the proper ob servance of the election procedures, depends on how polling stations are organised and operated' (Case No. 2a10148/12/0170/9).
In In the Resolution of the Odessa District Administrative Court of 23 October 2014, the court used to substantiate its position with the provisions of the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters that set the grounds for the principle of free elections (Case No. 815/6018/14). In another Resolution of 30 October 2015, the Odessa District Administrative Court, referring to the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters, stated that 'the basic principles of a pan-European electoral heritage can only be realised if certain general conditions are met: 1) respect for fundamental human rights, and in particular such freedoms as freedom of expression, assembly and association, without which true democracy is not possible; 2) the electoral law must be sufficiently stable and protected from party-political manipulation. And finally, and most importantly, there must be a number of procedural safeguards, especially regarding the organisation of elections; 3) election observation plays an important role in that it allows one to get an idea of how well the election process has taken place' (Case No. 815/6345/15).
In general, the vast majority of decisions of the administrative courts of Ukraine in which judges have applied the provisions of the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters concerned various aspects of equal electoral law, especially in consti tuency formation. In most court decisions, the judges have separately indicated the legal nature of the Code of Good Practice in Electoral Matters. For instance, 18 Available at: http://reyestr.court.gov.ua/Page/2 (access: 10.03.2020).  The current legislation of Ukraine, similarly to that of most other countries in the world, does not regulate such a term as 'soft law' today. However, the 'soft law' category can be found in the reasoning of some decisions of the courts of general jurisdiction in Ukraine when these decisions concern administrative cases. An important factor in the dissemination of the international 'soft law' docu ments is the activities of experts, academics and public human rights organisations, which introduce the values and principles of the relevant documents into the legal awareness of the participants of the election process. In one case, as election cam paign observers, and in the other, as voter educators on the international standards of their electoral rights. For instance, in Ukraine, with the support of the European Commission for Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission), the nongovern mental organisation, the Electoral Law Institute, publishes and disseminates to the participants of the election process a collection of 'European documents in the field of electoral rights.' 19 Voters' awareness of the 'soft law' documents encourages 19 Y. Klyuchkovsky (ed.), Europe's electoral heritage, Proceedings of the Venice Commission, the Parlia mentary Assembly of the Committee of Ministers, the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, Kyiv 2009. 'soFt laW' In the mechanIsm oF the InternatIonal and natIonal… 193 their use when applying to the election administration and courts, including the European Court of Human Rights, for the renewal of their electoral rights. This is where the principle works: 'Knowledge about citizens' electoral rights complicates violating these rights!. ' It is obvious that the reforms of the electoral legislation in Ukraine, an important result of which was the adoption of the Electoral Code of Ukraine 20 by the newly elected Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on 19 December 2019, encourage the assess ment of the use of the 'soft law' potential in organising and holding elections and the protection of the electoral rights of the citizens from possible violations of these rights. It is also worth noting that it contributed to the adoption of numerous recom mendations which were formulated in the international 'soft law' documents concerning the codification of the electoral law of Ukraine, which had a branched and somewhat unbalanced character before the adoption of the Election Code of Ukraine. For instance, in its In particular, the Venice Commission indicated in paragraph 102(d): 'The detail in which parliamentary elections are now regulated reinforces the need for the codification of all election legislation in Ukraine in a single unified Election Code. In the absence of a Code, it will be difficult to develop consistent practices in the administration of elections, and without consistency it will be difficult to promote public education and awareness of election procedures among election administra tors, state and local government employees and the judiciary' (Venice Commission 2006, CDLAD(2006

Conclusions
Considering the discussion above, 'soft law' should be understood as international advisory documents, most of which are intergovernmental resolutions containing statements, commitments, guidelines, reports, common positions, or policy state ments or intentions. The 'soft law' is an important source of the contemporary international law and holds an important place in the international and national protection of the citizens' electoral rights. With the 'soft law' documents the inter national community is able to respond quickly to the new trends and challenges inherent in the modern democracy in the preparation and conduct of elections in different countries. The role of the 'soft law' documents in protecting the electoral rights of the citizens at the international and national levels will only increase, espe cially in new and sensitive areas of the electoral law. This, in turn, causes further research in the theory and practice of the application of the 'soft law' international documents in the global practice and in the national legislation of countries of dif ferent regions of the world.