Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The growth of the Court's case law
- 3 Range of precedential resources
- 4 The bases of the system
- 5 The Advisory Committee of Jurists
- 6 The view taken by the League of Nations
- 7 The possibility of judge-made international law
- 8 Stare decisis
- 9 Distinguishing
- 10 Departing from a previous decision
- 11 Ratio decidendi and obiter dictum
- 12 Advisory opinions and decisions of chambers
- 13 The precedential impact of individual opinions
- 14 Effect and scope of the Court's case law
- 15 Conclusion
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The growth of the Court's case law
- 3 Range of precedential resources
- 4 The bases of the system
- 5 The Advisory Committee of Jurists
- 6 The view taken by the League of Nations
- 7 The possibility of judge-made international law
- 8 Stare decisis
- 9 Distinguishing
- 10 Departing from a previous decision
- 11 Ratio decidendi and obiter dictum
- 12 Advisory opinions and decisions of chambers
- 13 The precedential impact of individual opinions
- 14 Effect and scope of the Court's case law
- 15 Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Decisional authority
‘Judicial decisions’, said Hersch Lauterpacht, ‘particularly when published, become part and parcel of the legal sense of the community.’ Not everyone rejoices. Writing in 1942, Lord Wright remarked that one effect of the destruction inflicted during the war on ‘law libraries has been to reduce the number of authorities quoted in arguments in Court. Professor Goodhart’, he cheerfully added, ‘has assured me that this will conduce to the improvement of the law.’ Drastic action is not yet needed at The Hague; but beyond that it would not be prudent to prophesy. ‘The practising international lawyer of today’, remarked O'Connell, ‘… selects as his sharpest and most valued tool the judicial decisions which will support his case.’ This monograph is devoted to the precedential aspects of the most important of these, namely, decisions of the World Court itself; the prominence of the role played by them is all the more striking when it is considered that, as compared with the situation at municipal law, the number of cases decided by the Court is small.
Comparison may, of course, be made with several legal systems. If so wide an exercise is not undertaken, this is because, at the founding of the Permanent Court of International Justice, the schools of thought which were influential with the framers of its Statute were two, namely, the Continental and the common law schools.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Precedent in the World Court , pp. 1 - 12Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996