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‘Binding Force’ Revisited
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2009
Extract
What makes international law binding? This is a question that has often interested theorists and jurists. It has been regarded as identical with the question of what is the basis of obligation in international law. The meaning of the question being asked is sometimes not entirely clear. Being concerned with the binding force of international law may be easier to understand than speaking of the basis of obligation. It would be reasonable to assert that to talk of the binding force of law has a more accurate and specific connotation than referring only to the impact of obligations under the law. The meaning of the question being asked is sometimes not entirely clear. Being concerned with the binding force of international law may be easier to understand than speaking of the basis of obligation.1 It would be reasonable to assert that to talk of the binding force of law has a more accurate and specific connotation than referring only to the impact of obligations under the law. This is a minor point but is worth noting.
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- Copyright © T.M.C. Asser Press 1997
Footnotes
Member, Institut de droit international; Visiting Senior Fellow, Trinity Hall, Cambridge; sometime Honorary Professor of Law, University of Colombo; Professor of Law, University of Ceylon, Colombo; Director, Secretariat and Executive Secretary, World Bank Tribunal.
References
1. The problem that arises is connected with the idea that law always creates obligations and nothing else. While rules of law may generally, by implication, be reduced to some kind of obligation resting on one or more of the subjects, they also provide for other incidents such as powers, freedoms or liberties, disabilities, immunities and the like. The question is more appropriately framed by asking not why law has the power to create obligations to be observed but why rules of law, whatever their effect, have binding force.
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4. Ibid. p. 56 et seq.
5. Ibid. p. 36 et seq.
6. Ibid. p. 31 et seq.
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14. Among authors who do not pay attention to the question as such are Brownlie, I., Principles of Public International Law (1990);Google Scholar O'Connell, D.P., International Law (1970);Google Scholar Jennings, R.Y. and Watts, A.D., Oppenheim's International Law (1992);Google Scholar Shaw, M.N., International Law (1994);Google Scholar Halleck, H.W., International Law (1883);Google Scholar Wheaton, H., Elements of International Law (1866);Google Scholar Sibert, M., Traité de droit international public (1951);Google Scholar Scelle, G., Précis de droit des gens (1932);Google Scholar Guggenheim, P., Traité de droit international public (1953);Google Scholar Spiropoulos, J., Théorie genérate du droit international (1930);Google Scholar Sereni, A.P., Diritto intemazionale (1956–1965);Google Scholar Seidl-Hohenveldern, I., Völkerrecht (1994). Many authors discuss the legal nature of international law but do not distinguish it from the binding force of international law. The assumption presumably is that, if it is law, it is binding.Google Scholar
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40. The adoption of the 12-mile limit for the territorial sea, over the three-mile or other limit, even before the Law of the Sea Convention was adopted in 1982 and came into force, is an example of this phenomenon. It is also demonstrated by the jurisprudence of the Iran-US Claims Tribunal which has adopted a flexible standard of compensation for the expropriation of foreign property which may bedescribed as ‘appropriate compensation’ (see Amerasinghe, C.F., ‘Issues of Compensation for the Taking of Alien Property in the Light of Recent Cases and Practice’, 41 ICLQ (1992) p. 21, at p. 36 et seq.).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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