International Law, Malcolm Shaw
International Law, Malcolm Shaw
International Law, Malcolm Shaw
In the long march of mankind from the cave to the computer a central role
has always been played by the idea of law – the idea that order is necessary
and chaos inimical to a just and stable existence. Every society, whether
it be large or small, powerful or weak, has created for itself a framework
of principles within which to develop. What can be done, what cannot
be done, permissible acts, forbidden acts, have all been spelt out within
the consciousness of that community. Progress, with its inexplicable leaps
and bounds, has always been based upon the group as men and women
combine to pursue commonly accepted goals, whether these be hunting
animals, growing food or simply making money.
Law is that element which binds the members of the community to-
gether in their adherence to recognised values and standards. It is both
permissive in allowing individuals to establish their own legal relations
with rights and duties, as in the creation of contracts, and coercive, as
it punishes those who infringe its regulations. Law consists of a series of
rules regulating behaviour, and reflecting, to some extent, the ideas and
preoccupations of the society within which it functions.
And so it is with what is termed international law, with the important
difference that the principal subjects of international law are nation-states,
not individual citizens. There are many contrasts between the law within
a country (municipal law) and the law that operates outside and between
states, international organisations and, in certain cases, individuals.
International law itself is divided into conflict of laws (or private inter-
national law as it is sometimes called) and public international law (usually
just termed international law).1 The former deals with those cases, within
particular legal systems, in which foreign elements obtrude, raising ques-
tions as to the application of foreign law or the role of foreign courts.2
1 This term was first used by J. Bentham: see Introduction to the Principles of Morals and
Legislation, London, 1780.
2 See e.g. C. Cheshire and P. North, Private International Law, 13th edn, London, 1999.
1
2 international law
3 See the Serbian Loans case, PCIJ, Series A, No. 14, pp. 41–2.
4 See further below, p. 92.
5 North Sea Continental Shelf cases, ICJ Reports, 1969, p. 44; 41 ILR, p. 29. See also M.
Akehurst, ‘Custom as a Source of International Law’, 47 BYIL, 1974–5, p. 1.