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31 German Y.B. Int'l L. 9 (1988)
The Theory of International Customary Law

handle is hein.journals/gyil31 and id is 10 raw text is: 




ARTICLES


           The Theory of International Customary Law*

                          By Gennady M. Danilenko


                 I. Custom as a Source of International Law

                    1. The Concept of International Custom

   The formation of international law is the result of a complex political-legal
process which is determined by a number of economic, political and ideological
factors. The rules of international law do not directly emanate, however, from
social relations. In international law, as in any other legal system, the creation of
law, being a specific activity of States and other subjects of law, can take place only
within the framework of certain legal procedures which serve as generally recogni-
zed modes of manifestation of agreement of its subjects aiming at establishing
legally binding rules of conduct. As normative products of law-creating processes
recognised within the international community, the rules of international law exist
in forms consistent with these processes. The internationally recognized processes
of creating law along with the forms of its subsequent existence constitute the
characteristic element of international law as an institutional entity. From the
theoretical point of view, it may be asserted that without official recognition of
certain law-creating procedures and relevant forms of expression, law in general and
international law in particular cannot exist as a specific normative phenomenon.
From the practical point of view, it is of decisive significance that the existence of
law-creating procedures and relevant forms recognized by all States is an indispen-
sable pre-requisite for determining what specific rules have to be considered as law
and therefore implemented as such in international relations.
  Custom is one of these law-creating procedures. It also serves as one of the forms
of existence of international legal norms. In other words, it is one of the sources of
international law in a legal sense.
  The peculiarity of custom as a source of international law is that, in contrast to
international treaty, it is difficult to differentiate here between the law-creating
procedure and the normative result. Whereas the material source of a treaty
  * The author would like to acknowledge his appreciation to Professor William Butler of
University College London, who made many helpful editorial suggestions on an English
version of the article.

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