Sumary
In 2000 the International Law Commission (ILC) included within their work issues the “risks arising from the fragmentation of international law”. In the year 2006 the ILC published a full report as a result addressing what is known as the fragmentation of public international law.
As international law developed gradually evidenced a trend towards specializing in an increasingly growing number of issues to jeopardize their homogeneity as legal branch and enhance potential fragmentation. This trend has been marked as a result of new topics that placed international law in a delicate spot between sub-areas of international law and completely independent of it.
In this paper we address this problem on two sub-branches of international law such as the right investment and human rights applied to drinking water |