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The Rule of Unwritten International Law - Customary Law, General Principles, and World Order (Hardcover)
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The Rule of Unwritten International Law - Customary Law, General Principles, and World Order (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Research in International Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book seeks to re-appreciate the concept of customary
international law as a form of spontaneous societal
self-organisation, and to develop the methodological consequences
that ensue from this conception for the practice of its
application. In pursuing this aim, the author draws from three
different strands of scholarship that have not yet been considered
in connection with one another: First, general jurisprudential
theories of customary law; second, theories of customary
international law, especially as they relate to international
relations scholarship; and third, methodological approaches to the
interpretation of international law. This expansive, philosophical
layout of the book enables the author to put the conceptual enigmas
of customary international law into a broader perspective. Among
the issues discussed in the book are the dichotomy of its
traditional and modern forms and the respective benefits and
disadvantages of inductive and deductive approaches to its
ascertainment. In the course of this analysis, the author draws
insights from Friedrich August Hayek's theory of law as a
'spontaneous order', an information-processing device which enables
the participants of a legal system to make use of decentralised
knowledge. The book argues that the major advantage of custom as a
source of international law lies in the fact that it is the result
of a gradual process of trial and error, rather than the product of
deliberate planning. This makes it a particularly apposite source
of law in a time of seismic shifts in the distribution of power
within a vastly diverse community of States, when a new global
order is expected to emerge, the contours of which are not yet
clearly discernible. This book applies general concepts of legal
philosophy to explain the continuing relevance of custom as a
source of international law while at the same time inferring from
this theoretical framework concrete practical and methodological
consequences, the most important of which is the special role that
purposive interpretation plays with respect to rules of
international custom. Given this broad approach, the book will be
of interest to several groups of potential readers including
academics interested in the philosophy of customary law in general,
academic international lawyers and legal practitioners, especially
judges, scholars of international relations and all those
interested in how the international community of States organises
itself.
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