Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)

This article demonstrates that the cases decided by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are judge made law and are not derived from the rules of customary law. Judge made law, as enunciated by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are very general and imprecise. The decisions made by the ICJ and t...

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Main Author: Muhammad Abdul Malik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UUM Press 2016-11-01
Series:UUM Journal of Legal Studies
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=b98ff63e-55b6-4521-aa99-73ed7bdbf3ee
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spelling doaj-a2508d2e9b6448fe835165d8443cd3f12021-06-15T12:50:59ZengUUM PressUUM Journal of Legal Studies2229-984X0127-94832016-11-0110.32890/uumjls.7.2016.4634Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)Muhammad Abdul MalikThis article demonstrates that the cases decided by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are judge made law and are not derived from the rules of customary law. Judge made law, as enunciated by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are very general and imprecise. The decisions made by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals beget unpredictability or unexpected results. Normally, state parties are not happy with the decision made by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals and the discontented states are unable to take any actions as state parties need to comply with the decision of the ICJ. In this Article, two (2) cases, one in South America and the other one in Africa, were discussed in detail. The outcome of these two (2) cases is not palatable to some state parties. Since the decisions are not predictable and the outcome is not palatable to some state parties, this Article looks at possible solutions which are being offered in International Islamic Law (Siyar). Keywords: Islamic International Law (Siyar), International Court of Justice (ICJ), Judge Made Law, Maritime Boundary Delimitations, Unpredictable Results, The Principle of Joint Administration, The Principle of Joint Development.https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=b98ff63e-55b6-4521-aa99-73ed7bdbf3ee
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammad Abdul Malik
spellingShingle Muhammad Abdul Malik
Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
UUM Journal of Legal Studies
author_facet Muhammad Abdul Malik
author_sort Muhammad Abdul Malik
title Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
title_short Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
title_full Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
title_fullStr Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
title_full_unstemmed Unpalatable Decisions By International Court Of Justice (ICJ) And Palatable Solutions By Islamic International Law (siyar)
title_sort unpalatable decisions by international court of justice (icj) and palatable solutions by islamic international law (siyar)
publisher UUM Press
series UUM Journal of Legal Studies
issn 2229-984X
0127-9483
publishDate 2016-11-01
description This article demonstrates that the cases decided by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are judge made law and are not derived from the rules of customary law. Judge made law, as enunciated by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals are very general and imprecise. The decisions made by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals beget unpredictability or unexpected results. Normally, state parties are not happy with the decision made by the ICJ and the arbitration tribunals and the discontented states are unable to take any actions as state parties need to comply with the decision of the ICJ. In this Article, two (2) cases, one in South America and the other one in Africa, were discussed in detail. The outcome of these two (2) cases is not palatable to some state parties. Since the decisions are not predictable and the outcome is not palatable to some state parties, this Article looks at possible solutions which are being offered in International Islamic Law (Siyar). Keywords: Islamic International Law (Siyar), International Court of Justice (ICJ), Judge Made Law, Maritime Boundary Delimitations, Unpredictable Results, The Principle of Joint Administration, The Principle of Joint Development.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=b98ff63e-55b6-4521-aa99-73ed7bdbf3ee
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