- Tue Sep 24, 2024 2:05 pm
#109197
Hi Dom,
Answer D states that most of the violations come from "disagreements about what constitutes customary law." Customary international law is defined in the passage as "that body of commonly accepted-but not formalized-legal principles..." (lines 5-6). In other words, the "customary international law" are not actual laws at all but merely commonly agreed upon customs/standards.
What Answer D is describing, therefore, would be if different countries actually disagreed on what these standards should be. For example, if Country A declared that it thinks that it is perfectly acceptable for its pollution to spill over into other countries and other countries disagreed.
This is not what happens in the passage. The two environmental principles discussed in the first paragraph are "often held to be established norms" (lines 8-9). In other words, countries generally agree on what should be the environmental norms that countries should follow. The fact that many nations don't actually follow these norms in practice does not imply that they disagree with the norms in theory.
You note that the passage states "[these norms] merely represent some collective ideals" (lines 43-45). While this is definitely the author's view, this does not mean that the countries disagree on what the ideals are or should be. Rather, they simply don't actually live up to their ideals for any number of reasons.
To use an analogy, even people who commit murder generally don't believe/argue that murder should be perfectly acceptable and legal in all situations.
As for Answer C, to be held legally accountable means not only to be found legally responsible for certain actions but also to the receive the legal consequences for those actions, whether those be sanctions, imprisonment, etc.. "Remedies" in the passage refers to legal remedies, which can come in several forms, including simple punitive damages/fines or specific performance, such as cleaning up the environmental pollution. In other words, if a country does not actually suffer any actual consequences for its actions, then it would not be accurate to say that the country was held legally accountable.