Abhash Kumar, BA LLB, Shobhit Institute of Engineering and Technology (A Deemed to be University), Meerut, Uttar Pradesh
ABSTRACT
An 'International Organisation' is a legal institution established on a global scale through a treaty or other instrument. It has its own worldwide legal identity. The United Nations, the World Health Organisation, etc are examples of multinational organisations. This Paper examines the benefits and drawbacks of international organisations and their interaction with conventional sources of law, the changing content of international law, the changing law-makers, and the shifting concepts of compliance. It also poses new problems to the validity of international law, such as vertical and horizontal issues, as well as ideological and power challenges. International organisations have aided in the transformation of the substantive content of international law, resulting in a 'participant revolution' in the creation of international law. International organisations are now creating international law outside of the limits imposed by the conventional source doctrine. that international organs need not find formal delegations of power, are not constrained to divided or strictly circumscribed realms of legal action, and are not limited to formulating ‘internal’ institutional housekeeping regulations.
Keywords: international organization, international law, law-makers, compliance, ideology, power
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