The Role of General Principles of Procedure in Commercial Disputes in Iran and the International Court of Justice
Keywords:
Role, General Principles of Procedure, Iranian Disputes, International Court of JusticeAbstract
No legal system can be conceived without general principles. These principles hold a special position not only in domestic law but also in international law. Procedural principles constitute the structure and foundation governing adjudication. In explanation, the nature of human beings has always been and continues to be in pursuit of truth and justice; adjudication is regarded as the most evident and tangible manifestation of the realization of truth and justice within any legal system. The ultimate aim and ideal of procedural principles is precisely this, and adherence to these principles promises the realization of a judicial system based on truth and justice. Principles such as the adversarial principle, the independence of the court, judicial impartiality, the public nature of proceedings, the right to a fair trial, and other related principles have all emerged and evolved in pursuit of the realization of truth and justice. At the International Court of Justice, even if general principles of law had not been explicitly recognized as a source of international law in the Statute of the Court, they would still possess the capacity to be invoked. These principles, irrespective of customary and treaty-based international rules, are themselves considered an independent source of international law. The analysis of the role and implementation of general procedural principles in commercial disputes in Iran, as well as in the contentious and advisory opinions of the Court, constitutes the subject of this article.
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Copyright (c) 2025 Mohammad Rezaeimofrad (Author); Mahmood Ghaumzadeh (Corresponding author); Ebrahim Delshad Maaref (Author)

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