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7 Int'l & Comp. L.Q. 468 (1958)
Estoppel in International Law

handle is hein.journals/incolq7 and id is 484 raw text is: ESTOPPEL IN INTERNATIONAL LAW

By
I. C. MAcGIBBON *
I
MORE than thirty years ago it was observed that the doctrine of
estoppel 1 did not appear to have received much attention in the
sphere of international law.2      A  certain  reluctance to invoke
estoppel may have been justified at that time, but the marked
increase since then in international judicial and arbitral activity
has provided substantial grounds for the modern tendency to
consider estoppel as one of the general principles of law recognised
by civilised nations. 3 The question whether the juridical basis
of the doctrine of estoppel is to be found in customary international
law rather than in the general principles of law  is not free from
difficulty; and it is not the purpose of this article to suggest that
it can be satisfactorily answered.' It would seem that a convincing
solution must wait on both a comparative investigation into the
operation of the concept in municipal systems of law and a more
widespread review of State practice than the present writer has
been able to attempt. The scope of the present article is limited to
drawing attention to some of the aspects of estoppel which have
been noted or suggested by publicists and expressed in State
pleadings before international tribunals, in diplomatic correspon-
dence, and particularly in advice tendered to the British Govern-
ment by the Law Officers of the Crown.
Underlying most formulations of the doctrine of estoppel in
international law is the requirement that a State ought to be
consistent in its attitude to a given factual or legal situation. Such
a demand may be rooted in the continuing need for at least a
M.A., PH.D.(Cantab), Lecturer in Public Law, UniversitT of Aberdeen.
The Anglo-American terminology which has gained wide acceptance is used
throughout.  Where the Anglo-American lawyer refers to estoppel, the con-
tinental jurist will usually say that the party is 'precluded ' (Lauterpacht,
Private Law Sources and Analogies of International Law (1927), p. 204). The
concept is known to Scots lawyers as  personal bar.
2 See McNair,  The Legality of the Occupation of the Ruhr, in British Year
Book of International Law, 5 (1924), pp. 17 et seq., at p. 34.
3 Thus, the concept of estoppel finds a place in the study by Dr. Bin Cheng
entitled General Principles of Law as applied by International Courts and
Tribunals, at pp. 137 et seq.
4 See, however, below, pp. 470, 478 and 512-513.
468

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