cthia wrote:After the Beowulf fiasco settles, and the galaxy gets back to "normal," who is going to take on the mantle of enforcing the Eridani Edict? Whoever does, should probably put it in writing so the galaxy will be aware of it, so they'll have to get everyone else in the galaxy to sign off on it just like the original enforcers. Or it won't be anything short of vigilante justice. Unless, of course, yours is the planet skrewed.
Which offers up an amusing scenario. The RMN or the GA or some entirely new alliance including the Andermani, approaching the anorexic remnants of the gorilla asking them to sign on for "protection."
I find that very amusing. Very! LOL
I don't really think any star system will violate it, it is too long a part of the general spacefaring culture. In the books, the only times it ever comes up is with the Masadans threatening Grayson, or the Malign trying to snuff Torch. Neither is a "normal" system government.
I think it's in the text, if not the Pearls, but the Eridani Edict was one of the few pieces of meaningful legislation enacted by the Assembly of Stars, ever. Which means ALL the members of the League at the time signed off on it as LAW, because a single veto would have stopped it. These days, those are Core Worlds; but whatever comes out of the League, only rogue states will perform these atrocities.
It has been a part of their culture almost as long as the League existed; and unlike the Cherwell Convention, the planetary systems were prepared to enforce it.
It is very likely that any treaties signed by the League in those early days would include a prohibition of actions covered under the Edict; leaving the Edict itself a standard in interstellar law, whether the League itself remains or not.
Rob