• Title of article

    Alleged Fragmentation of International Law: Magnitude of the Problem and Available Solution

  • Author/Authors

    Ahmad, Shakeel National Defence University (NDU) - Center of International Law, Faculty of Contemporary Studies - Department of Peace Conflict Studies, Pakistan , Choudhry, Ishtiaq Ahmad National Defence University (NDU) - Center of International Law, Faculty of Contemporary Studies - Department of Peace Conflict Studies, Pakistan

  • From page
    679
  • To page
    696
  • Abstract
    Alleged fragmentation of international law is a phenomenon that is developing due to increased legal activities at international level. A sliced up international legal reflects the reality of conflicting rules and jurisdiction of various disputing bodies over one issue. Even the decision of one court seems to contradict the decision of a different (specialized) court. This is evident in comparison of theNicaragua case and the Tadic case. The first decided by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the second decided by International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia (ICTY). This paper concludes that such conflicts are the natural consequences resulting from a complex interplay among various factors playing a role in shaping contemporary international law. The authors acknowledge such an alleged fragmentation and related problems and suggest the need to develop a framework which can resolvesuch technical problems.
  • Keywords
    International Law , human rights , legal , community , reforms
  • Journal title
    Journal Of Political Studies
  • Journal title
    Journal Of Political Studies
  • Record number

    2649086