Inefficient Customs in International Law

E. Kontorovich
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This Article explores whether and when rules of customary international law (CIL) can be expected to be efficient. Customary rules are often regarded as desirable because in certain circumstances, they promote the welfare of the group in which they arise. Unless these circumstances apply among states, the efficiency arguments for the legalization of customary norms do not apply. The Article takes as its central observation the divergent treatment of custom in domestic and international law. In international law, if a customary behavior of states can be identified, it is automatically elevated to the status of legal obligation without any independent examination of whether the custom is a good one. International custom is customary international law. This reification of custom is in marked contrast to the treatment of custom in private law. No one doubts that customary behaviors exist in various societal subgroups, but tort law does not assume that customs are normatively desirable, and does not automatically transform customs into legally binding obligations. Thus tort law does not take custom to dictate the standard of care; the fact-finder must independently determine whether the practice is efficient, though its customary status has some positive evidentiary value. Law and economics scholars have varied views about whether custom is presumptively efficient in the private law context. The most optimistic view holds that private custom will generally be welfare enhancing, and thus courts should give legal recognition to such practices. Yet even the optimistic view holds that efficient custom would only arise in certain circumstances: when there are thickly repeated dealings between members of an insular, homogenous group whose members play reciprocal roles. The Article takes these earmarks of efficient custom and examines whether they apply to international custom. It finds that much of international custom should not be expected to be efficient even in the most optimistic view of custom. Some areas of CIL, like diplomatic privileges, might satisfy efficient custom criteria. This suggests that, contrary to current practice, CIL should not be treated as one undifferentiated phenomenon. Rather, the standards for establishing a CIL norm should vary across different substantive contexts and different groups of states.
国际法中的低效海关
本文探讨习惯国际法规则是否有效以及何时有效。习惯规则通常被认为是可取的,因为在某些情况下,它们促进了产生习惯规则的群体的福利。除非这些情况适用于国家之间,否则将习惯规范合法化的效率论点就不适用。本文以国内法与国际法对习惯的不同对待为中心。在国际法中,如果一个国家的习惯行为可以被识别,它就会自动被提升到法律义务的地位,而不需要对该习惯是否良好进行任何独立的审查。国际惯例是国际习惯法。这种对习惯的物化与私法中对习惯的处理形成了鲜明的对比。没有人怀疑习惯行为存在于不同的社会子群体中,但侵权法并不假设习惯在规范上是可取的,也不会自动将习惯转化为具有法律约束力的义务。因此,侵权行为法不以习惯来规定注意标准;事实发现者必须独立地确定实践是否有效,尽管其习惯地位具有一定的积极证据价值。在私法背景下,习惯法是否具有假定的效率,法律和经济学学者的观点各不相同。最乐观的观点认为,私人习俗通常会增加福利,因此法院应该在法律上承认这种做法。然而,即使是乐观的观点也认为,有效的习俗只会在某些情况下出现:当一个孤立的、同质的群体的成员之间存在大量重复的交易时,这些群体的成员扮演着相互的角色。本文以有效海关的这些特征为例,考察其是否适用于国际海关。报告发现,即使从最乐观的角度来看,许多国际惯例也不应该被期望是有效的。在某些领域,例如外交特权,可能会满足有效的海关标准。这表明,与目前的做法相反,不应将CIL视为一种无差别的现象。相反,建立CIL规范的标准应根据不同的实质性背景和不同的国家群体而有所不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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