International Customary Law: Jurisprudential Analysis and Significance
I. Introduction: The Decentralized Legislative Process
International Customary Law (CIL) represents the oldest and most original source of international law. Unlike domestic legal systems where legislation is centralized, CIL is a decentralized, bottom-up process of law-making.1 It is formally defined in Article 38(1)(b) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) as:
“International custom, as evidence of a general practice accepted as law.”2
it is crucial to recognize that CIL is not merely “unwritten law”; it is the manifestation of the sociological consensus of States hardened into legal obligation.
II. The Constitutive Elements (The Dualist Theory)
The orthodox view, confirmed in the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases (1969), is that CIL requires two distinct elements.3 The absence of either renders a norm mere usage or comity, not law.
1. State Practice (Consuetudo / The Objective Element)
This refers to the material acts of States.4 For practice to generate law, it must meet three criteria:
- Duration: While ancient custom required immemorial antiquity, modern jurisprudence accepts that a short duration is not a bar if the practice is overwhelming.
- Consistency: The practice need not be perfect, but “virtually uniform” (North Sea Cases).5
- Generality: It must be widespread and representative, particularly including States whose interests are “specially affected.”6
2. Opinio Juris sive Necessitatis (The Subjective Element)7
This is the psychological belief that the practice is rendered obligatory by the existence of a rule of law requiring it.8 It distinguishes a legal custom (e.g., diplomatic immunity) from a mere habit of courtesy (e.g., rolling out a red carpet for heads of state).
Jurisprudential Paradox: The “Chronological Paradox”
- The Problem: How can a new rule of customary law be created? For the first States to adopt a practice, they must believe they are already bound by law.9 If no law exists yet, their belief is false.
- The Solution: Jurists like Bin Cheng argue for “Instant Custom”—in new fields like space law, opinio juris (expressed via UN Resolutions) can precede practice. Others argue that the initial acts are “proposals” that ripen into law upon acceptance (acquiescence) by other States.10
III. Significance in International Law
CIL serves functions that treaty law cannot fulfill, ensuring the international legal order remains complete (completezza).
1. Universality and Binding Force
Treaties only bind signatories (pacta tertiis nec nocent nec prosunt). CIL, however, binds all States (universal validity), regardless of consent, unless a State qualifies as a “Persistent Objector” (see below).
- Case Law: In the Nicaragua v. United States (1986), the US had a reservation preventing the ICJ from applying multilateral treaties (like the UN Charter).11 The Court ruled it could still adjudicate based on customary international law, which exists parallel to treaties even if the content is identical.
2. Interaction with Treaties (The Generation of Norms)
As established in the North Sea Cases, treaties interact with custom in three ways:
- Declaratory: The treaty codifies existing custom (e.g., Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties).12
- Crystallizing: The treaty negotiation process hardens an emerging practice into law.
- Generating: A treaty provision attracts widespread participation and practice by non-parties, generating a new customary norm.13
3. Jus Cogens (Peremptory Norms)14
Most norms of jus cogens (norms from which no derogation is permitted, e.g., prohibition of genocide, torture) derive their validity from CIL rather than treaties, as they bind states that might not be party to specific human rights conventions.
IV. Significance in State Practice
1. The “Persistent Objector” Rule
This rule protects the “voluntarist” nature of international law.15 If a State persistently and openly objects to a new norm while it is forming, it is not bound by it.16
- Example: The US and UK were persistent objectors to the expansion of the Territorial Sea beyond 3 nautical miles, until the 12-mile limit became overwhelmingly accepted, forcing them to capitulate.
- Significance: It prevents the “tyranny of the majority” in international law but is politically difficult to sustain indefinitely.
2. “Modern Custom” and the Sliding Scale
Traditional custom prioritized physical practice (what States do). Modern state practice, especially in Human Rights and Environmental Law, prioritizes verbal practice (UN General Assembly Resolutions, diplomatic statements).
- Frederic Kirgis’s “Sliding Scale” Theory: If the opinio juris (moral importance) is extremely high (e.g., prohibition of torture), less physical practice is required to prove the custom exists.
3. Filling the Vacuum (Cyber and Space Law)
In domains where treaty negotiations are stalled (e.g., the weaponization of outer space or cyber warfare), State practice (and silence/acquiescence) is actively forming the “rules of the road” before any written convention exists.
V. Case Law
| Case | Principle Established |
| North Sea Continental Shelf (1969) | Established the strict “two-element” test. Ruled that the “equidistance principle” was not CIL because state practice was not sufficiently uniform. |
| The Lotus Case (1927) | Permissive Principle: Whatever is not explicitly prohibited is permitted. Also ruled that “abstention” (inaction) only creates custom if there is a conscious duty to abstain. |
| Nicaragua v. United States (1986) | Parallel Existence: Customary norms (e.g., non-use of force) survive even when codified in treaties (UN Charter). Clarified that practice need not be perfect, only general; breaches treated as violations confirm the rule, not destroy it. |
| Right of Passage (Portugal v. India) | Regional Custom: Custom does not have to be global; it can be bilateral or regional (binding only two states). |
VI. Critical Evaluation & Conclusion
Critique: CIL is often criticized for its vagueness (“indeterminacy”). Powerful States often shape “practice” (e.g., through military incursions) more than weaker States, leading to the critique that CIL is a tool of hegemony (TWAIL – Third World Approaches to International Law).
Conclusion:
Despite the proliferation of treaties, International Customary Law remains the “background radiation” of the international legal order.17 It is dynamic, filling gaps where treaties fail, and serves as the primary vehicle for the universalization of fundamental human rights. mastering CIL is mastering the art of arguing what the law is, in the absence of a written text.


