1 The expression ‘customary international law’ concerns, on the one hand, the process through which certain rules of international law are formed, and, on the other, the rules formed through such a process. While these rules are not necessarily general in scope, all existing general rules of international law are customary (see paras 35–40 below; see also General International Law [Principles, Rules and Standards]).2 Even though language is necessary to communicate their content, expression through language is not an indispensable element of customary...
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