The fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war marked a major turning point in the conduct of international law and international relations. After the sovereignty of an international order reversed the prevailing balance of power created by the Second World War and its controls were translated into the Charter of the United Nations, rapid transformations revealed that the rules and principles of public international law were not capable of approaching new international situations and interpreting international events and realities; This has given rise to the crisis of international law, both at the level of the structural legal system and at the level of international practice, which is the marginalization of international law and its principles.

         The great growth in international relations has imposed new conditions on public international law, which have given rise to its prosperity and development and have led it to completely new fields, from a law that concerns itself primarily with States or the community of States and whose rules revolve around a promise to it, to a law of the international community that, through various axes, regulates it and governs the links that arise within it.

LINK: https://www.bayancenter.org/2020/10/6418/