GENERAL PRINCIPAL Since the European Community Treaty was enacted in the 1950s, there has been a marked change in the lack of provisions on the protection of human rights in the implementation of community issues since the role of the European Union in the uncertain and uncertain law. The main progress is that the courts who pointed out that the "General Principles of the EC Law" includes the protection of some of the fundamental rights of the members stated a common constitutional tradition is there. Information sources that the community can manage, the most important are regulations and directives.
The general principle is a secondary legal basis. Many international laws embody the same principles as those of the world's major legal systems, whether conventional or contracted. A common origin is derived. . . . General principles common to domestic legal systems can function as independent legal information sources. If there is no practice sufficient for the state to give a specific principle position to customary law and its principles have not been enacted in the General International Agreement, the legal basis may be important.
General principles are the second source of international law, which establishes international law through gaps in special circumstances. For example, the passage of time as a defense against international claims by citizens representing the people may not be completely applicable in practice as a rule of customary law. Nonetheless, it can be invoked at least as a principle of international law in claims based on personal injury. . . This is a common principle common to the major legal systems in the world, so it is not suitable for international claims. Other rules derived from the general principle include rules on justice, such as rules that no one can judge in their work, res judicata, generally fair procedural rules. International practices sometimes change this principle into rules of customary law. "
2 "International law can only be created by the country, either by adoption and ratification of treaties, customary law established through legal support, or approval of general legal principles." Paul C. Szasz, Council began legislation, 96 American International Law Journal, AJIL, 4, 901-905, 901 (2002). 10 Regarding the use of nuclear weapons, it provides additional assurance to countries without nuclear capability and complements the system established by the NPT, but does not undertake any obligation to the state. SC Res. 984 (1995). Security concerning the use of nuclear weapons for non - nuclear - weapon states, which are parties to the Nuclear Non - Proliferation Treaty. Please refer to http://daccess-dds-ny.UN.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N95/106/06/PDF/N9510606.pdf. OpenElement