Abstract
We have reached a point when lawyers' commissions are summoned to discuss the consequences of legal proliferation as an ill threatening the standing of international law through incompatibility or irrelevance. Should this trend towards fragmentation be reversed? Should we devise a legal non-proliferation treaty? Or should we, conversely, welcome the current diversification in the sources of law as reflecting the realities of today's world, as a reflection of the flexibility and adaptability of law when the norm of sovereignty on which it is based is itself undergoing considerable recalibration? In short: how should we deal theoretically as well as practically with the diversification of sources of law?
Recommended Citation
Kalypso Nicolaïdis & Joyce L. Tong,
Diversity or Cacophony? The Continuing Debate Over New Sources of International Law,
25
Mich. J. Int'l L.
1349
(2004).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil/vol25/iss4/30