Functions of international law and its limitations
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Functions-:
International law is not rules. It is a normative system.
All organized groups and structures require a system of normative conduct which is regarded by each other and by the group as a whole, as being obligatory, and for which violation carries a price.
Normative systems make possible that degree of order if society is to maximize the common good—and, indeed, even to avoid chaos in the web of bilateral and multilateral relationships that that society embraces.
Without law at the domestic level, cars cannot safely travel on the roads.
Limitations-:
1- Need of consensus.
2- No single international ruler.
3- No enforcement mechanism.
4- Lack of funding.
5- Vast differences of culture,no real norms.
International law is not rules. It is a normative system.
All organized groups and structures require a system of normative conduct which is regarded by each other and by the group as a whole, as being obligatory, and for which violation carries a price.
Normative systems make possible that degree of order if society is to maximize the common good—and, indeed, even to avoid chaos in the web of bilateral and multilateral relationships that that society embraces.
Without law at the domestic level, cars cannot safely travel on the roads.
Limitations-:
1- Need of consensus.
2- No single international ruler.
3- No enforcement mechanism.
4- Lack of funding.
5- Vast differences of culture,no real norms.
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