International Law Seminar
International Law Seminar
International Law Seminar
Nations
Introduction
Material sources of international law may be defined as the
actual materials from which an international lawyer
determines the rule application to a given situation. The term
‘sources’ refers to methods or procedures by which material
sources is created.
Material source may also be described as the origin of the
law. The material source provides evidence of the existence
of rules which when proved, have the status of legally binding
rules of general application. The sources of international law
concern the particular rules which constitute the system, and
the process by which the rules become identifiable as rules of
law.
The sources of international law are classified into 5
categories:
1. International conventions
2. International customs
3. General principles of law recognised by civilized nations
4. Decisions of judicial or arbitral tribunals and juristic
works
5. Decisions or determinations of the organs of
international institution
General principles of international law
The general principles of international law is the third source
of international law recognised under Article 38(1)(c) of the
International Court of Justice statute. This provision comes
into picture when other traditional sources, such as the
treaties or customary law does not provide a rule of decision.
However, the term ‘general principles of international law as
applied to the civil nations’ is vague, and many scholars have
tried to interpret it.
Prescription
Res Judicata
Estoppel