608 Pages
    by Routledge

    Immanuel Kant's legal philosophy and theory have played an enormous role in the development of law since the eighteenth century. Although this influence can be seen primarily in German law and in the law of nations which have traditionally been oriented toward German legal development, today Kant's philosophy has experienced a Renaissance in the Anglo-American legal world. This anthology collects what the editors believe to be the very best of articles on Kant's legal theory, with an emphasis on his Metaphysics of Morals of 1797. In particular the articles relate to: 1) the nature of law and justice, 2) private law, 3) public law, 4) criminal law, 5) international law, and 6) cosmopolitan law.

    1: Strategic Denial and Deception; 2: Elements of Strategic Denial and Deception; 3: Conditions Making for Success and Failure of Denial and Deception: Authoritarian and Transition Regimes; 4: Conditions Making for Success and Failure of Denial and Deception: Democratic Regimes; 5: Conditions Making for Success and Failure of Denial and Deception: Nonstate and Illicit Actors; 6: Arms Control: Focus on Denial and Deception; 7: Detecting Deception: Practice, Practitioners, and Theory; 8: The Denial and Deception Challenge to Intelligence 1; 9: The Impact on Foreign Denial and Deception of Increased Availability of Public Information about U.S. Intelligence 1

    Biography

    B. Sharon Byrd is Professor at the Law and Language Center, University of Jena, Germany. Joachim Hruschka is Professor at the University of Erlangen, Germany.