As traditionally conceived, the creation of a new rule of customary international law requires that states believe the law to already require the conduct specified in the rule. Distinguishing the process whereby a customary rule comes to exist from the process whereby that customary rule becomes law dissolves this chronological paradox. Creation of a customary rule requires only that states come to believe that there exists a normative standard to which they ought to adhere, not that this standard is law. What makes the customary rule law is adherence by officials in the international legal system to a rule of recognition that treats custom as a source of valid law. Confusion over this distinction arises because in the international legal s...
<p>In their majority, public international lawyers postulate that for a new rule of customary law to...
When a state claims its practices are lawful but at the same time another claims this unlawful, a pa...
I shall argue in this essay that the World Court used a method which might be called the rule of man...
As traditionally conceived, the creation of a new rule of customary international law requires that ...
By tradition, jurists, statesmen, and scholars have looked exclusively to two factors to divine whet...
This article argues that some familiar principles, like the protection of reasonable expectations or...
This article examines the phenomenon of accelerated formation of customary international law. It arg...
For most legal rules, an evolutionary perspective may be elucidating. Yet it would be hard to claim ...
Customary international law is an enigma. It is produced by the decentralized actions of states, an...
International courts have at times interpreted the customary rules on interpretation.This is interes...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
Rules of customary law figure prominently in today’s law and policy. Across policy fields, courts an...
Abstract The International Court of Justice (ICJ) regularly invokes a two-element tes...
The so-called ‘instant’ international customs are sometimes singled out as a speci...
The ascertainment of rules of customary international law has been typically inserted in the methodo...
<p>In their majority, public international lawyers postulate that for a new rule of customary law to...
When a state claims its practices are lawful but at the same time another claims this unlawful, a pa...
I shall argue in this essay that the World Court used a method which might be called the rule of man...
As traditionally conceived, the creation of a new rule of customary international law requires that ...
By tradition, jurists, statesmen, and scholars have looked exclusively to two factors to divine whet...
This article argues that some familiar principles, like the protection of reasonable expectations or...
This article examines the phenomenon of accelerated formation of customary international law. It arg...
For most legal rules, an evolutionary perspective may be elucidating. Yet it would be hard to claim ...
Customary international law is an enigma. It is produced by the decentralized actions of states, an...
International courts have at times interpreted the customary rules on interpretation.This is interes...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
Rules of customary law figure prominently in today’s law and policy. Across policy fields, courts an...
Abstract The International Court of Justice (ICJ) regularly invokes a two-element tes...
The so-called ‘instant’ international customs are sometimes singled out as a speci...
The ascertainment of rules of customary international law has been typically inserted in the methodo...
<p>In their majority, public international lawyers postulate that for a new rule of customary law to...
When a state claims its practices are lawful but at the same time another claims this unlawful, a pa...
I shall argue in this essay that the World Court used a method which might be called the rule of man...