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Resumen de Some ways that Theories on Customary International Law Fail: a reply to László Blutman

Andrew T. Guzman, Jerome Hsiang

  • This brief comment seeks to clarify a foundational concept inherent in any discussion of customary international law (CIL): consent. Any serious attempt to construct a coherent theory of CIL must resolve the fundamental tension between non-consensual rulemaking and international law's formal commitment to the principle of consent. As a matter of observation, states rarely accept non-consensual laws or external norms as binding. Yet it is also undeniable that CIL serves and persists as a fundamental building block of international law. Therefore, in order to coherently theorize CIL, we must - at the very least - provide a plausible explanation for why rationally self-interested states would take CIL and other non-consensual laws seriously.


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