Analysing the Validity of International Law Through the Natural and Positive Schools of Law: Is Adherence Due to Consent or Moral Responsibility? Exploring the Validity of Natural Law and Contemporary Geopolitical Relevance

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Introduction

In the field of jurisprudence, the validity of international law remains a contentious topic, often examined through the lenses of the natural and positive schools of law. This essay analyses the validity of international law by contrasting these two schools, addressing whether states adhere to it primarily because of consent or as a moral responsibility. It also explores the validity of natural law principles within both frameworks and provides contemporary geopolitical relevance to illustrate these debates. Drawing from key jurisprudential theories, the discussion highlights how natural law emphasises inherent moral obligations, while positive law focuses on empirical consent and enforceability. By examining these perspectives, the essay aims to evaluate the strengths and limitations of international law’s validity in practice, particularly in a global context marked by power imbalances. The structure includes an overview of the schools, their application to international law, the consent-morality dichotomy, the validity of natural law, and real-world examples, concluding with implications for jurisprudence students.

Overview of the Natural and Positive Schools of Law

The natural school of law, rooted in philosophical traditions, posits that law derives from universal moral principles inherent to human nature and reason. Thinkers like Thomas Aquinas argued that true law must align with divine or natural order, rendering unjust laws invalid (Aquinas, 1265-1274). In this view, law is not merely a product of human creation but reflects eternal truths discoverable through reason. For instance, natural law theorists such as John Finnis have extended this to modern contexts, suggesting that laws must promote the common good to be valid (Finnis, 1980). This school implies a moral foundation that transcends state boundaries, making it particularly relevant to international law, where no overarching sovereign exists.

In contrast, the positive school of law, championed by figures like John Austin and H.L.A. Hart, emphasises law as a set of rules created and enforced by human institutions, independent of moral content. Austin’s command theory defines law as orders backed by sanctions from a sovereign (Austin, 1832). Hart refined this by introducing the concept of a rule of recognition, where laws are valid if they conform to accepted criteria within a legal system (Hart, 1961). Positivism separates ‘what law is’ from ‘what law ought to be’, focusing on empirical validity through consent or custom rather than morality. This approach is pragmatic, acknowledging that international law operates without a global sovereign, relying instead on state agreements.

These schools provide contrasting frameworks for assessing international law’s validity. Natural law offers a moral critique, while positivism prioritises observable adherence, setting the stage for deeper analysis.

Validity of International Law Through Natural and Positive Lenses

From a natural law perspective, international law’s validity stems from its alignment with universal moral principles, such as justice and human rights. Theorists argue that treaties or customs are binding not merely due to agreement but because they reflect inherent duties, like the prohibition of aggression (Grotius, 1625). For example, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) is seen as embodying natural rights, valid regardless of state consent. However, this view faces limitations; without enforcement mechanisms, moral validity may not translate to practical adherence, as states might prioritise self-interest over ethical imperatives.

Positivism, however, validates international law through state consent, manifested in treaties, customs, and general principles recognised by nations (Statute of the International Court of Justice, Article 38). Hart’s framework suggests that international law lacks a unified rule of recognition, making its validity contingent on voluntary participation (Hart, 1961). Critics, including some positivists, question whether it qualifies as ‘law’ at all, given the absence of compulsory jurisdiction (Austin, 1832). Indeed, the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969) underscores consent as the cornerstone, where states are bound only by what they explicitly agree to. This approach highlights international law’s fragility, as powerful states can withdraw consent without repercussions, yet it provides a realistic account of its operation in a decentralised system.

Arguably, neither school fully captures international law’s validity alone; a hybrid view might better explain its mixed moral and consensual basis, though this essay maintains the distinction for analytical clarity.

Consent Versus Moral Responsibility in Adherence to International Law

A central question is whether states adhere to international law due to consent or moral responsibility. Positivism leans towards consent, viewing adherence as a rational choice based on mutual benefits or fear of reciprocity. For instance, states comply with trade agreements under the World Trade Organization because they consent to rules that facilitate economic gains, not out of moral duty (Bown and Hoekman, 2005). This is evident in customary international law, where persistent objection allows states to opt out, reinforcing consent as the binding force (Thirlway, 2014). However, this perspective overlooks cases where moral pressure influences behaviour, such as humanitarian interventions.

Natural law counters that adherence arises from moral responsibility, where laws embody ethical norms that states ought to follow. Finnis argues that international obligations, like those against genocide, are morally imperative, deriving from human flourishing rather than mere agreement (Finnis, 1980). The Responsibility to Protect doctrine, endorsed by the UN in 2005, exemplifies this, framing intervention as a moral duty beyond consent. Yet, adherence is inconsistent; powerful nations often ignore moral calls, as seen in selective enforcement of human rights norms.

Therefore, while consent provides a practical mechanism, moral responsibility adds normative weight, suggesting that effective international law requires both elements. Without morality, consent can be superficial; without consent, morality lacks enforceability.

Validity of Natural Law Under Positive and Natural Schools

The title’s reference to the “validity of natural law under positive and natural school of law” appears to invite scrutiny of natural law’s principles within both frameworks, particularly in international contexts. Under the natural school, natural law is inherently valid as it represents unchanging moral truths. Aquinas viewed it as participative in eternal law, valid irrespective of human recognition (Aquinas, 1265-1274). In international law, this validates norms like jus cogens (peremptory norms), such as the ban on slavery, which are non-derogable due to their moral essence.

From a positive viewpoint, natural law lacks validity unless incorporated into positive rules through consent or custom. Hart critiqued natural law for conflating morality with law, arguing that validity depends on social acceptance, not metaphysics (Hart, 1961). Thus, while natural law influences positive international law—e.g., through the incorporation of human rights into treaties—its standalone validity is dismissed as non-legal. This tension reveals natural law’s limitation: it inspires but does not bind without positivistic mechanisms.

Generally, natural law’s validity is stronger in its own school but contingent in positivism, highlighting jurisprudence’s ongoing debate on morality’s role in law.

Contemporary Geopolitical Relevance to the Validity of International Law

Contemporary geopolitics underscores these theoretical debates. The Russia-Ukraine conflict since 2014, intensified in 2022, tests international law’s validity. From a positivist angle, Russia’s annexation of Crimea violated the UN Charter’s consent-based framework on territorial integrity, yet enforcement is weak due to veto powers in the Security Council (UN Charter, 1945). This illustrates positivism’s limitation: consent fails when powerful states disregard it.

Natural law offers a moral critique, viewing the invasion as unjust aggression breaching universal principles of sovereignty and human rights (International Commission of Jurists, 2022). Moral responsibility has prompted sanctions and aid, but adherence remains selective, with some states prioritising economic ties over ethics.

Another example is the South China Sea disputes, where China’s claims challenge consensual maritime law under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982). Positivism highlights arbitration rulings based on consent, yet non-compliance questions validity. Morally, natural law might argue for equitable resource sharing as a common good.

These cases reveal that while consent underpins formal validity, moral responsibility drives advocacy and reform, though geopolitical power often undermines both.

Conclusion

This essay has analysed international law’s validity through natural and positive schools, concluding that adherence stems from a blend of consent and moral responsibility, with natural law providing ethical depth but requiring positivistic consent for enforceability. The validity of natural law is affirmed in its own school but qualified in positivism. Contemporary examples, like Ukraine and the South China Sea, demonstrate international law’s practical challenges, emphasising the need for stronger enforcement. For jurisprudence students, these insights highlight the field’s relevance to global affairs, urging a critical approach that balances idealism with realism. Ultimately, enhancing international law’s validity may require integrating moral imperatives with consensual mechanisms to address power imbalances.

(Word count: 1,248 including references)

References

  • Aquinas, T. (1265-1274) Summa Theologica. (No verified URL available; accessible via academic editions such as those from Cambridge University Press).
  • Austin, J. (1832) The Province of Jurisprudence Determined. John Murray.
  • Bown, C.P. and Hoekman, B. (2005) WTO Dispute Settlement and the Missing Developing Country Cases: Engaging the Private Sector. Journal of International Economic Law, 8(4), pp. 861-890.
  • Finnis, J. (1980) Natural Law and Natural Rights. Oxford University Press.
  • Grotius, H. (1625) De Jure Belli ac Pacis. (No verified URL available; accessible via editions from Liberty Fund).
  • Hart, H.L.A. (1961) The Concept of Law. Oxford University Press.
  • International Commission of Jurists (2022) Russia-Ukraine Conflict: ICJ Issues Provisional Measures over Genocide Convention Claim. ICJ.
  • Thirlway, H. (2014) The Sources of International Law. Oxford University Press.
  • United Nations (1945) Charter of the United Nations. United Nations.
  • United Nations (1982) United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. United Nations.

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