TY - CHAP
T1 - Interpreting Customary International Law
T2 - You’ll Never Walk Alone
AU - Merkouris, Panos
PY - 2022/5/5
Y1 - 2022/5/5
N2 - Customary international law is one of the formal sources of international law and plays a pivotal role in the existence and functioning of the international legal system. Although for a rule of CIL to emerge a widespread, representative, constant and virtually uniform state practice is required, accompanied by the requisite opinio juris, that does not necessarily mean that CIL is a slow and archaic process, which has been overcome by extensive treaty-making. On the contrary, CIL remains a vital element in the corpus of international law that is open to refinement, clarification, development and evolution. This process does not happen only through the classical emergence and/or subsequent modification of the rule, but also and perhaps most importantly through the process of interpretation. This chapter demonstrates this by showing that CIL interpretation is neither problematic from a theoretical perspective, nor is it the only example of interpretation of unwritten rules. This is further reinforced by jurisprudence taken from both the domestic and the international legal system, although such interpretative exercises are not without their limits. What emerges from this analysis is that CIL interpretation, as Sur has beautifully noted, is of a negentropic nature that constantly nourishes and updates CIL.
AB - Customary international law is one of the formal sources of international law and plays a pivotal role in the existence and functioning of the international legal system. Although for a rule of CIL to emerge a widespread, representative, constant and virtually uniform state practice is required, accompanied by the requisite opinio juris, that does not necessarily mean that CIL is a slow and archaic process, which has been overcome by extensive treaty-making. On the contrary, CIL remains a vital element in the corpus of international law that is open to refinement, clarification, development and evolution. This process does not happen only through the classical emergence and/or subsequent modification of the rule, but also and perhaps most importantly through the process of interpretation. This chapter demonstrates this by showing that CIL interpretation is neither problematic from a theoretical perspective, nor is it the only example of interpretation of unwritten rules. This is further reinforced by jurisprudence taken from both the domestic and the international legal system, although such interpretative exercises are not without their limits. What emerges from this analysis is that CIL interpretation, as Sur has beautifully noted, is of a negentropic nature that constantly nourishes and updates CIL.
KW - interpretation
KW - customary international law
KW - customary law
KW - legal theory
KW - TRICI-Law
KW - logical interpretation
KW - national courts
KW - international courts and tribunals
KW - in dubio mitius
KW - intention of parties
KW - evolutive interpretation
KW - systemic interpretation
KW - teleology
U2 - 10.1017/9781009025416.017
DO - 10.1017/9781009025416.017
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781316516898
VL - 1
T3 - TRICI-Law Book Series
SP - 347
EP - 369
BT - The Theory, Practice, and Interpretation of Customary International Law
A2 - Merkouris, Panos
A2 - Kammerhofer, Jörg
A2 - Arajärvi, Noora
A2 - Mileva (ass. ed.), Nina
PB - Cambridge University Press
CY - Cambridge
ER -