All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by licence or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above
You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer Crown copyright material is reproduced under Class Licence Number C01P0000148 with the permission of OPSI and the Queen’s Printer for Scotland
Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016, United States of America
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Data available
Library of Congress Control Number: 2018967692
ISBN 978–0–19–884182–1 (pbk.)
ISBN 978–0–19–884181–4 (hbk.)
Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
Links to third party websites are provided by Oxford in good faith and for information only. Oxford disclaims any responsibility for the materials contained in any third party website referenced in this work.
Preface
For a new edition of a work of this kind to be called for only five years after the original was published is an indication of the extent to which its subjectmatter is still in continuous development. This is not to say that new sources are being discovered or devised: one of the contentions advanced in this book is that in this respect international law is fully developed, that what may appear to be a new source of law will turn out, on inspection, to be a variant, or a derivation, of one of those classically recognized. But that does not mean that the law itself deriving from those sources is static; it is continually called upon to apply to new questions, or to mould itself to new requirements, and these may be revelatory of particular aspects of sources-theory.
It is one recognized source in particular that goes on requiring or attracting the attention of international scholars and judges: customary international law, to use the form of reference preferred by the International Law Commission; also referred to in the past simply as ‘custom’. Despite a very visible presence in international relations of major multilateral treaties and other documentary material (some in effect codificatory, e.g., ILC reports and conclusions), custom continues to attract the most attention, and this for two reasons. First, being a more flexible concept and process than treaty law, it is continually being revised and re-examined in practice and, significantly, in judicial decisions; and secondly, it is the most fertile field for the enunciation of new theories of how it operates, or how it ought to operate. These, or some of them at least, whether one agrees with them or not, demand to be noticed, if not necessarily discussed, if a study of sources is to make a claim to completeness.
In this context, a development since the first publication of this work that required to be taken into account was the completion, by the International Law Commission, of its study of the Identification of Customary International Law, with the adoption of a restatement in the form of sixteen conclusions, with detailed annotations (see Chapter III). However, in addition, new treaties have been adopted, and new judicial and arbitral decisions given, and the nature of the sources of law is such that they have been in background of most of these, avowedly or not. The work of preparation of this new edition has not lacked material.
As in the case of its predecessor, many of the ideas presented in this edition have benefitted from discussion with my good friend and former colleague
Dr Cristina Hoss, Legal Officer, ICJ. Once again also, I owe a great debt of gratitude to the Library of the International Court of Justice, now directed by Mr Cyril Emery, Librarian (the successor to Juliana Rangel, whose assistance I acknowledged in the previous edition), for help and support in my researches. I wish particularly to thank Mr Artur Brodowicz, Deputy Librarian; not only was he able to find everything I asked for, with great promptitude, but in other respects he went out of his way to be helpful. The staff of the Oxford University Press have guided the text from draft to publication with their usual courtesy and efficiency.
The Hague, 27 January 2019
Hugh Thirlway
5. The extent of application of a rule of customary
IV. General Principles of Law as a Source of Law
1. What are the ‘general principles of law’?
V.
VI. Interaction or Hierarchy between Sources
1.
‘hierarchy of sources’
VII. Specialities: jus cogens, Obligations erga omnes, Soft Law
VIII.
3(a)
4. WTO, ICSID: trade and investment law
5.
6.
IX. Some Alternative Approaches
1. Inadequacy or irrelevance of recognized sources
2. The role of ethical principles
3. The insufficiencies of the theory of international customary law
a fortiori
contra legem
erga omnes
et hoc genus omne
Glossary of Latin Phrases
Indicates that if A is so, then B will be so too, as the same reasons apply even more strongly to B
(Of equity) contrary to law
(Of an obligation) owed to all other subjects of law
And this whole category exceptio non adimpleti contractus
inadimplementit non est adimplendum
infra legem
The objection that the other party has not performed his side of the litigated contract
One side of a contract does not have to be complied with if the other side has not been complied with
(Of equity) within the law in statu nascendi
jure gestionis
jure imperii
jus cogens
jus dispositivum
jus naturale
lex ferenda
lex lata
non liquet
Coming to birth, not yet in existence
The opposite of jure imperii (defining the class of acts that a State performs in another State’s territory not as a State, but as e.g. a commercial activity)
By right of sovereignty (defining the class of acts that a State performs in another State’s territory as a State, and not as e.g. a commercial activity)
Peremptory norms
Non-peremptory norms, which can be departed from by agreement
Natural Law
Law to be created, desirable law
The law that exists
A judicial finding that no decision can be given because there is no law on the point obiter dictum
A statement of law in a judicial decision that is not necessary to the determination of the case (and is thus, in Anglo-American law, not regarded as authoritative)
opinio juris sive necessitatis
pacta sunt servanda
The view that something is required by considerations of law or of necessity
What has been agreed to must be respected pacta tertiis nec nocet nec prodest
No benefit is derived, and no injury suffered, from something agreed between third parties
par in parem non habet imperium
praeter legem
quod est absurdum
ratio decidendi
res inter alios acta
res judicata [pro veritate habetur]
ubi judex, ibi jus
usque ad coelum
usus
Between equals, neither has dominion over the other
(Of equity) alongside the law
Which is absurd (as conclusion, demonstrating that the argument was unsound)
The legal considerations on which a judgment is based; to be distinguished from an obiter dictum (q.v.)
Something done or agreed between other parties (from which therefore no benefit or burden arises: cf. pacta tertiis nec nocet nec prodest)
What has been judicially determined [counts as truth]
The law is found in judicial decisions (literally, ‘Where there is a judge, there is law’)
Vertically upwards to the sky (in full, ab inferos usque ad coelum: from the underworld up to the heavens: classical description of the extent of sovereignty)
Usage: an alternative term for the practice required to support the existence of a custom
Table of Cases
INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
Accordance with International Law of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence in respect of Kosovo [2010] ICJ Rep 403
Activities of Nicaragua in the Border Area [2013] ICJ Rep 170
Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v Serbia and Montenegro) [2007-II] ICJ Rep 27; [2007-II] ICJ Rep 89 23, 37, 113, 163–64, 176–77, 183, 202
Application of the Genocide Convention (Bosnia and Herzegovina v Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), Preliminary Objections [1996] ICJ Rep 595 134–35
Application of the Genocide Convention (Bosnia and Herzegovina v Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), [2007] ICJ Rep 43 134–35, 136
Application of the Genocide Convention (Croatia/Serbia) [2015-I] ICJ Rep 3
117, 163–64, 183, 202
Application of the Interim Accord of 13 September 1995 (Former Republic of Macedonia v Greece) [2011] ICJ Rep 644
44–45, 114–15
Application of the Obligation to Arbitrate under Section 21 of the UN Headquarters Agreement [1988] ICJ Rep 12
Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (DRC v Rwanda) [2006] ICJ Rep 6 .
31
. . 51–52, 54–55, 174–76, 178–79, 180–81, 184–85
Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (DRC v Uganda) [2005] ICJ Rep 168 139, 150–51
Arrest Warrant of 13 April 2000 (DRC v Belgium) [2002] ICJ Rep 3 73–74, 135–36, 140–41, 174–76
Asylum [1950] ICJ Rep 266 76–78, 87, 100, 103–4, 130, 148–49 Avena and other Mexican Nationals [2004-I] ICJ Rep 61 112, 139 Barcelona Traction Light & Power Co Ltd [1970] ICJ Rep 3 .
Haya de la Torre [1951] ICJ Rep 71 103, 127–28, 130
Judgment No 2867 of ILO [2012] ICJ Rep 10 117
Jurisdictional Immunities of the State (Germany v Italy) [2012] ICJ Rep 99 31, 67, 73–74, 79, 82, 88, 94–96, 141, 160, 174–76, 180–81
LaGrand (Germany v United States of America) [2001] ICJ Rep 275 116, 139
Land and Maritime Boundary between Cameroon and Nigeria, Preliminary Objections [1998] ICJ Rep 275
Land, Island and Maritime Frontier Dispute [1992] ICJ Rep 351 .
Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa in Namibia (South West Africa) notwithstanding Security Resolution 276 [1971] ICJ Rep 16
134–35
133–34
26–27, 114–15
Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory [2004] ICJ Rep 3 150–51, 211
Legality of the Threat of Use of Nuclear Weapons [1996] ICJ Rep 226 17, 18–19, 52, 68–69, 92, 93, 100–1, 127–29, 154–55, 209–11
Legality of the Use of Force (Serbia and Montenegro v UK) [2004] ICJ Rep 1307 134–35, 150–51
Maritime Delimitation and Territorial Questions between Qatar and Bahrain, Jurisdiction and Admissibility [1994] ICJ Rep 112
Maritime Delimitation and Territorial Questions between Qatar and Bahrain, Merits [2001] ICJ Rep 40
Maritime Delimitation between Peru and Chile [2014] ICJ Rep 3
190–91
129–30
25–26, 51
Maritime Delimitation in the Area between Greenland and JanMayen [1993] ICJ Rep 38 . . . . 157, 158–59
Maritime Delimitation in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean (Costa Rica v Nicaragua), Judgment of 2 February 2018 117
Maritime Delimitation in the Indian Ocean [2018] ICJ Rep 3 41
Maritime Delimitation in the Pacific Ocean (Somalia v Kenya) [2018] ICJ Rep 3 44
Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v United States) [1986] ICJ Rep 14 64, 66, 68, 76, 78–79, 102, 131–32, 156–57, 159, 179, 209
Monetary Gold (Italy v France, United Kingdom and United States) [1954] ICJ 2 117
Territorial Dispute (Libyan Arab Jamahariya/Chad) [1994] ICJ Rep 6
37
Trial of Pakistani Prisoners of War, Order of 15 December 1973 [1973] ICJ Rep 347 49–50
United States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran, Judgment [1980] ICJ Rep 3 76, 195–96, 203–4
PERMANENT COURT OF INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE
Diversion of Waters from the Meuse, PCIJ Series A/B No 70 (1937) .
125
Factory at Chorzów, PCIJ Series A, No 17 (1928) 116–17
“Lotus”, PCIJ Series A, No 10 (1927) 16, 17, 18–19, 125–26, 128–29, 212 Wimbledon case, PCIJ Series A, No 1 (1925) 41
HUMAN RIGHTS COURTS
European Court of Human Rights
Al-Jedda v United Kingdom, Application No 27021/08, Judgment of 7 July 2011, ECHR Reports (2011) 121–22
Bellilos v Switzerland, ECHR (1988) Ser A No 132 33, 47, 48–49, 198
Gradinger v Austria, ECHR (1995) Ser A No 328-C
Loizidou v Turkey, ECHR (1995) Ser A No 130
Pla and Puncenau v Andorra (Application No 69498/01, 13 July 2004)
Inter-American Court of Human Rights
47
108–9
202
Benjamin et al v Trinidad and Tobago, Ser C No 81 (1 September 2001) 47
Constantine et v Trinidad and Tobago, Ser C No 82 (1 September 2001)
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS
International Criminal Court
Prosecutor v Omar Hassan Ahmed Al-Bashir, July 2017. .
47
135–36
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
Hadžihasanovic and Kabura, Case No IT-01-47-T, 15 March 2006
65–66
Prosecutor v Tadič, Decision on the Defence Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on Jurisdiction (2 October 1995) IT-94-1-T 186, 220–22
Special Court for Sierra Leone
Charles Taylor, Appeals Chamber, Case No SCSL-2003-01-I, Decision on Immunity from Jurisdiction, 31 May 2004 135–36
OTHER
US/Iran Claims Tribunal
Harza et al v Islamic Republic of Iran, Award No. 232-97-2 122–23
Arbitral Tribunals
Abu Dhabi arbitration, 1951, 18 ILR 144
Advisory Opinion of the Arbitral Tribunal constituted in virtue of the Compromise signed at Rome on 30 June 1964 (USA/Italy), RSA xvi 100
Amco Asia Co v Indonesia, ICSID, Award para 267
Arbitration Commission on Yugoslavia, Opinion No 3 of 4 July 1992
Argentina/Chile Boundary Dispute, 1966 UNRIAA xvi 109
Bulama Island arbitration, J. B. Moore, History and Digest of the International Arbitrations to which the United States has been Party, together with appendices containing the treaties relating to such arbitrations and historical and legal notes (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1898)
Chaco case, UNRIAA iii 1819
Goldenberg & Sons v Germany, AD 4 (1927–8), No 369 108–9
Hormones case (WTO Report of the Appellate Body: Australia–Measures Affecting Importation of Salmon, 6 November 1998, WT/DS18/AB/R) 5, 213
Mondev International Ltd v USA (ICSID Award, 11 Oct 2002) 85–86
Rainbow Warrier (New Zealand v France), France–New Zealand Arbitration Tribunal, 82 ILR 500 (1990)
Sarropoulos v Bulgarian State, AD 4 (1923–4), No 173
Texaco v Libya (1977) 53 ILR 422
US–Stainless Steel (Mexico) Appellate Body Report, 30 April 2008
NATIONAL
Austria
Holubek v Government of the United States of America, Supreme Court of Austria, Juristische Blätter (Wien), 84 (1962), 43; ILR, vol 40 p 73 141
Belgium
Botelberghe v German State, 18 February 2000, Court of First Instance of Ghent . . . . . . . 141–42
Canada
Schreiber v Federal Republic of Germany [2002] Supreme Court of Canada, Supreme Court Reports (SCR), vol 3, p269 . .
Table of Cases
France
SOS Attentat and Castelnau d’Esnault v Qadaffi, Head of State of the State of Libya, Court of Cassation, Criminal Chamber, 13 March, No 1414 140–41
Greece
Margellos v Federal Republic of Germany, Case No 6/2002, ILR, vol 129, p 529 .
Ireland
McElhinney v Williams, 15 December 1995, Irish Supreme Court, [1995] 3 Irish Reports 382; ILR, vol 104, p 69 .
Poland
Natoniewski v Federal Republic of Germany, Supreme Court, Polish YIL (2010), xxx 299 .
Slovenia
United Kingdom
Case No Up-13/99, para 13
Freedom and Justice Party and Ors [2018] WLR (D) 460 64 R v Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary, ex parte Pinochet Ugarte (Amnesty International Intervening) (No 3) [1999] UKHL 17; [2000] AC 147; [1999] 2 All ER 97 140–41
United States
Schooner Exchange v Mcfaddon, 11 US (7 Cranch) 116 (1812) 160
Table of Legislation
LAW- MAKING INSTRUMENTS
Arab Charter on Human Rights, 22 May 2004 205
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam, 1990 205
Chicago Convention on Civil Aviation (7 December 1944) Doc 7300
ICAO 195
Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women (8 December 1979) 1249
UNTS 13 .
205–6
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (78 UNTS 277) . . . . 39, 54–55, 169–70, 184–85, 220–21, 232–33
Art III(1)(c) 23
Art IX. .
183, 202
Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes between States and Nationals of other States (18 March 1965), 575 UNTS 159, Art 25 28–29
Declaration by the Government of Egypt on the Suez Canal and the Arrangements for its Operation (24 April 1957) 265 UNTS 299 59
Declaration by the King of Jordan (‘Address to the Nation’, 31 July 1988) waiving claims to the West Bank Territories
59
Declaration on Principles of International Law Concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among States (GA Res. 2625 (XXV)) 150–51
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 213 UNTS 22, Art 19 48–49
European Convention on State Immunity (16 May 1972), Council of Europe, ETS NO.74 141–42
General Act for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes (26 September 1928) 93 LNTS 343 . .
49–50
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 55 UNTS 187, Art XXI . . . 168–69
Geneva Convention on the Continental Shelf (29 April 1958), 499 UNTS 311 13–14, 44, 88, 149–50, 157–58, 163–64
Art 1 184
Art 2 184
Art 3 184
Art 6 75, 157–58
Art 12 . . . . . .
. 183–84
Geneva Conventions I, II, III and IV of 1949 (75 UNTS 31, 85, 135, 287) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39, 209, 210
Hague Convention of 1899 with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land, Preamble 210
Hague Convention No IV of 1907 respecting the Law and Customs of War on Land 115–16
Art 3 150–51
Additional Protocol I (1977), Art 1(2) 212–13
Hague Convention No. VIII of 1907 relative to the Laying of Automatic Submarine Contact Mines . . . . . . . 208–9
Hague Regulations of 1907 concerning the Laws and Customs of War on Land, Art 42. . .
150–51
Inter-American Convention on Asylum (Havana, 1928) 22 AJIL 158 130
ICJ Practice Directions 138–39
ICJ Resolution concerning the Internal Judicial Practice of the Court 138–39
ICJ Rules of Court
Art 47 117
Art 88
Art 89
Interim Accord between Greece and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (13 September 1995) 1891 UNTS I-32193 .
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
53
53
. 44–45
Art 6 154–55
Table of Legislation
Montevideo Convention on Asylum (26 December 1933) . . .
. . . . . . 148–49
Rome Statute of the ICC (17 July 1998) 2187 UNTS 90 .
Arts 5–8 .
Arts 6–9
. . 22, 136, 138–39, 152–53, 220–21
222
221
Art 10 149
Art 21(1)(c) 108–9
Art 21(3) 152–53
Santiago Declaration (Chile, Ecuador, Peru, 1962) 25–26
Security Council Resolution 803 (1993) 220–21
Security Council Resolution 808 (1993) .
Security Council Resolution 955 (1994) .
220–21
220–21
Security Council Resolution 1966 (Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals) 22 December 2010 220–21
Statute of the International Court of Justice 3, 9, 110, 138
Statute of the International Tribunal for Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law in the Territory of the former Yugoslavia since 1991 (ICTY), UNSC Res 827 1993 221–22
Statute of the International Law Commission, UNGA Res 174 (II) (21 November 1947)
Art 2(i) 145–46
Art 16(e) 145–46
Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice . . . . . . . 3, 9, 11–12, 109, 126–27
Stockholm Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution, 1979 . . . 218 Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations and Consular Rights (Iran/United States) (15 August 1955) UNTS I-4132
Art I 189–90
Art XX(1)(d) 158–59
Art XXI 189–90
Art XXI(2) 158–59
Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and Germany (Treaty of Versailles, 28 June 1919)
Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and other Celestial Bodies, 1967, 610 UNTS 205 112, 128 ‘Truman Proclamation’: Proclamation 2667, Policy of the United States With Respect to the Natural Resources of the Subsoil and Seabed of the Continental Shelf (28 September 1945) .
. 91
United Nations Charter . . . . . . . . . 12–13, 16, 26–27, 92, 102, 156–57, 199, 220–21
Preamble
Art 2(1) .
Art 2(7) .
209, 225
117–18
72–73
Art 13.P1(a) 148–49
Art 55 198–99, 201–2
Art 56 198–99, 201–2, 206–7
Art 65(3) 174–75
Art 66(a) 174–75
Table of Legislation
Art 103 27
Ch VII . . . .
. . . 220–21
United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (10 December 1984) 1465
UNTS 85 170–72, 173
Preamble .
Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (23 May 1969) 1155 UNTS 331 . . . . . . 35–36, 37–38, 39, 41, 42–43, 44–45, 113–15
Art 19(c) .
Art 20
Art 26 .
171, 172–73
Art 6(2) 173
Art 7(1) 173
Art 13 172–73
Art 29 170–71
Art 31 .
172–73
Art 36 172–73
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (10 December 1982) 1833 UNTS 3 .
United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief (25 November 1981)
A/RES/36/55 193–94
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (10 December 1948)
GA Res 217 A (III) 193–94, 198–99
Art 18
160–61
Art 60 114–15
Art 64 161, 163–64, 173–74
RECOMMENDATORY INSTRUMENTS
ILC Draft Articles on State Responsibility, (1996) GAOR 51st Session Supp.10 .
Art 16
206–7
Art 18(3) 206–7
Vienna Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) (Vienna, 11 April 1980) 1498 UNTS 3
Art 9 61–62
Vienna Convention on Succession of States in Respect of Treaties 1978 (entered into force 6 November 1996) 1946 UNTS 3
Art 34 49–50
111
. 23
ILC Guide to Practice on Reservations to Treaties . . . . . . . . . . . . 49, 156, 184–85
ILC Report of the Working Group on Unilateral Acts of States, A/CN.4/L.703 55–56
NATIONAL
France
Code Civil 152–53
Art 1134 10–11
United States
Patriot Act 15
Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations of the United States 1978 44–45
I
The Nature of International Law and the Concept of Sources
1. Introduction
The concept of the ‘sources of law’ is frequently to be encountered in legal writing in the field of international law, and in the decisions of international tribunals. Most treatises of a general nature on international law find it necessary to include a survey of the concept of ‘sources’.1 While at the level of the application of this system, that is to say in the direct relations and negotiations between States, the notion of sources is less visible, it nevertheless underlies any claim to a legal entitlement, and any complaint of a breach of international law.
This is one way in which, considered from the standpoint of the systems of law in force in the various countries and regions of the world, international law is different. While it is no longer possible, as historically it once was, to suggest that as a system it does not deserve the name of ‘law’,2 the lawyer versed in one or more systems of domestic law may well be confused by the absence of certain familiar landmarks, and the presence of unusual features. The concept of ‘sources of international law’ is one of these, as is the very fact that international law, in its everyday application, appears to require such a concept, which does not normally need to be invoked in domestic (national) systems, though it is of course present there also.3
1 A rare exception is J. Trachtman, The Future of International Law: Global Government (Cambridge 2013).
2 Cf. H. L. A. Hart, The Concept of Law, 2nd edn. (Oxford: Clarendon, 1994), 213ff.
3 Cf. Hart., Concept of Law, 95 ff. Neither the term ‘sources’ nor the concept is a familiar part of the everyday lexicon of English or American lawyers. In French legal terminology, the term source ‘se rapporte aux procédés de creation de régles juridiques’ for purposes of domestic law, but has a wider meaning for international law, covering ‘à la fois les modes de production normatifs (des régles generales, du droit objectif) et les modes de création de droits et obligations particuliers (du droit subjectif)’ (M. Kohen, ‘La pratique et la théorie des sources du droit international’, in Société française pour le droit international, Colloque de Genéve (2004), 81 at 82). Another way of expressing the point is to observe that in domestic law, contracts create obligations but do not make law, while
Even a definition of ‘law’ in the international context may not be an entirely simple matter; but let us offer a simple working definition for immediate purposes: it is, shall we say, a system of precepts governing relations between a defined group of persons or entities (the ‘subjects’ of law), such that an act of compliance or non-compliance with those precepts involves certain consequences, which are independent of the will of the actor; this in the sense that the actor may choose to comply, or to refuse, in the knowledge and possibly with the intention that the appropriate consequence will follow, but is not free to choose whether or not the act will have those predetermined consequences.4
From where does international law derive its content and its authority? At the level of domestic law, questions of this kind rarely need to be posed, because the answer in most cases is evident. A fundamental element of a legal and social structure is a legislature, whatever particular form it may take. If the legislator has spoken, the result is (unless otherwise stipulated) binding law, to be observed by all persons present on the territory. The primary ‘source’ of law is thus the legislature. In some legal systems, there may exist also a body of law established over the years by decisions of the courts, not in application of legislation but of a body of ‘common law’ or ‘customary law’, and this too may be regarded as a ‘source’.
Also absent from the international scene is any system of public courts, including a court of last resort, not only open to all members of the international community, but having compulsory and binding jurisdiction over each of them. The jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice (hereafter ‘the ICJ’) remains voluntary, even for members of the United Nations, who are as such parties to its Statute. There exists, however, a large and continually growing number of treaties, bilateral and multilateral, providing for each of the parties to bring a dispute with another party before the ICJ, or before another instance having powers of binding settlement. The details of international judicial and arbitral settlement of disputes are not our concern here: but the existence of dispute settlement mechanisms is in itself significant. All law has ultimately to be put to the test of ‘How would a court decide?’ (ubi judex, ibi jus), even when, as in the case of disputes between many members of the international community, there exists no mechanism in international law, treaties are a source not merely of obligations but of law. See further Ch. II sect. 1.
4 It is in this sense that law is said to be ‘binding’, another slippery concept to define (Hart, Concept of Law, 216). Another way of looking at this aspect is with the idea of ‘authority’: see B. D. Lepard, Customary International Law: A New Theory with Practical Applications (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 47 ff. See also the idea of ‘sanction’ in H. Kelsen, Allgemeines Staatslehre, French trans.: Théorie générale du droit et de l’État (Paris: LGDJ; Brussels: Bruylant, 1997), 11.
for judicial examination and settlement unless and until the parties so agree. In the courtroom the question has to be ‘What is the law?’ and not ‘What ought the law to be?’5
At the international level, broadly speaking such a legislator and such a supreme court are thus absent; but law exists and is created or changed, and one way of expressing this phenomenon is through recognition of certain ‘sources’. The term itself has, however, become indissolubly associated with the theory of international law known as ‘positivism’,6 and with a special status attached to a particular international text: Article 38 of the Statute (the international convention) that created the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) in 1920, a text that was re- enacted in almost identical terms in the 1946 Statute of that body’s successor, the ICJ. This text forms a convenient starting-point for study of the concept of sources; but that is not to say that the present work is necessarily imbued solely with a positivist spirit. Any theory of international law has to answer the same question: how do we know what is, and what is not, law, and how did this or that rule come to have that status? We shall examine at a later stage how some modern philosophies deal with the problem, and whether or to what extent this involves the notion of ‘sources’. Nor has Article 38 of the PCIJ and ICJ Statutes, in the years since 1920 and 1946, been universally regarded as the final and only definition of the sources of international law: indeed, we shall have to examine a number of contentions or proposals for a widening or even abandonment of the sources listed, or even of the concept of ‘sources’ itself. But these are best understood when confronted with the structure of legal thinking that underlay Article 38, or has developed around its terms.
Some reference should be made to a more recently developed concept which bears some relation to that of sources: that of ‘meta-law’. The idea is seen principally in the context of custom as a source:
Meta-law on custom (or ‘meta-custom’) can be defined as the law relating to the formation and identification of custom or, in other words, to ‘norms which regulate the
5 Similarly, when the ICJ was engaged in determining a territorial frontier, between El Salvador and Honduras, it rejected arguments based on El Salvador’s greater need for territory, due to demographic pressures, and ‘the superior natural resources . . said to be enjoyed by Honduras’; the Court observed that ‘the question is not whether the colonial province [that became El Salvador] needed wide boundaries, but where those boundaries actually were’: [1992] ICJ Rep 396, para. 58. See also Continental Shelf (Tunisia/Libyan Arab Jamahiriya), excluding economic considerations from affecting the position of the boundary between two continental shelves: [1982] ICJ Rep 77–8, paras. 106–7.