Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) provides the most authoritative statement on the sources of international law. Established in 1945 as an integral part of the United Nations Charter, the provision continues to guide judicial reasoning and academic debate. This essay examines the text of Article 38, analyses each enumerated source, and considers both its enduring influence and the limitations highlighted by modern practice. The discussion draws on the wording of the Statute itself together with leading doctrinal commentary to evaluate how far the article remains fit for purpose in a rapidly changing international order.
The Wording and Structure of Article 38
Article 38(1) directs the Court to apply: (a) international conventions, whether general or particular; (b) international custom, as evidence of a general practice accepted as law; and (c) the general principles of law recognised by civilised nations. Paragraph (2) adds that judicial decisions and the teachings of the most highly qualified publicists may be used as subsidiary means for the determination of rules of law. The structure therefore distinguishes between formal sources and supplementary aids. Although the article was originally drafted for the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1920, its retention with only minor stylistic changes in 1945 reflects the international community’s reluctance to adopt a more comprehensive code of sources.
International Conventions
Treaties constitute the most visible and predictable source listed in Article 38(1)(a). Once ratified, conventions create binding obligations for the parties and, in some cases, generate obligations erga omnes. The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969 further clarifies the rules of formation, interpretation and termination, thereby reinforcing the position of treaties within the system. Nevertheless, the voluntary nature of treaty-making means that important areas of international relations remain unregulated by conventional law. States may also attach reservations that fragment the normative reach of multilateral instruments, a practice that Article 38 itself does not address.
International Custom
Article 38(1)(b) requires the Court to identify both a general practice and the accompanying opinio juris. The two-element test has been repeatedly endorsed by the ICJ, notably in the North Sea Continental Shelf cases (1969). Custom possesses the advantage of flexibility; it can develop without the need for formal negotiation. Yet identification remains contested. The International Law Commission’s 2018 Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law attempt to distil state practice and opinio juris from a wider range of materials, including resolutions of international organisations. Even so, the subjective element of opinio juris continues to generate divergent interpretations, particularly where silence or inconsistent conduct must be assessed.
General Principles of Law
The reference to “general principles of law recognised by civilised nations” in Article 38(1)(c) was intended to fill gaps left by treaty and custom. In practice, the Court has invoked principles such as good faith, res judicata and estoppel. These principles are usually distilled from municipal legal systems and then elevated to the international plane. Critics argue that the phrase “civilised nations” carries outdated connotations and may marginalise non-Western legal traditions. Contemporary scholarship therefore prefers to speak of principles “recognised by the principal legal systems of the world,” thereby avoiding the hierarchical language originally employed.
Subsidiary Means and Their Growing Influence
Article 38(1)(d) permits the Court to consult judicial decisions and scholarly writings only as subsidiary means. In reality, the weight accorded to both has increased. The Court frequently cites its own prior judgments, creating a de facto system of precedent. Academic commentary, although formally subsidiary, shapes the arguments of counsel and the reasoning of judges. Moreover, soft-law instruments and the work of expert bodies now exert considerable influence, even though they fall outside the strict wording of the article. This development suggests that the hierarchy envisaged in 1945 has become more fluid.
Limitations and Contemporary Challenges
Article 38 has been criticised for its state-centric orientation and its silence on sources such as unilateral acts, decisions of international organisations and peremptory norms. The rise of non-state actors, including transnational corporations and armed groups, further tests the traditional catalogue. While some of these gaps can be bridged by expansive readings of existing categories, others require fresh conceptual tools. The article’s silence on hierarchy among sources, apart from the implicit priority of jus cogens, also leaves unresolved conflicts between treaty and custom or between general principles and subsequent practice.
Conclusion
Article 38 remains the indispensable starting point for any discussion of international law sources. Its concise formulation has provided stability and predictability for more than seven decades. At the same time, evolving practice and doctrinal critique reveal the need for supplementary sources and a more inclusive vocabulary. The ICJ itself continues to apply the provision pragmatically, demonstrating both its resilience and its limitations. Future development is therefore likely to proceed incrementally through judicial elaboration rather than through formal amendment of the Statute.
References
- Brownlie, I. (2008) Principles of Public International Law. 7th edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- International Court of Justice (1945) Statute of the International Court of Justice. San Francisco: United Nations.
- International Law Commission (2018) Conclusions on Identification of Customary International Law. New York: United Nations.
- Shaw, M.N. (2017) International Law. 8th edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969) 1155 UNTS 331.

