What is it about?
Traditional ideas about the private nature of the international legal order are increasingly being forced to contend with the development of public legal elements at the international level. The notion of the international community interest is key to understanding these developments and, as such, has transformed our understanding of international law. There are many different approaches to the public/private distinction in law, broadly categorised into relational, public authority, and interest-based approaches. These can be reduced to four key elements of publicness: the existence of a community or public; the universality of the public regime in question with its own boundaries; normative and institutional hierarchies; the objectivity of obligation and responsibility. The development of the community interest and related norms of international law can be seen to have introduced and strengthened all of these elements of publicness within the international legal system. It is thus on its way to becoming an international public legal order. This has important implications for our understanding of international law and the future development of the international legal order.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
This article explores the impact of the developing concept of 'community interest' in international law. It shows that this concept is closely connected to and responsible for the increasingly public nature of the international legal order.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Community Interest and the International Public Legal Order, Netherlands International Law Review, April 2021, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s40802-021-00186-7.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







