1206 Pages
    by Routledge

    Over the last 300 years public international law has developed from a set of principles, ultimately grounded in natural law, into an extremely complex web of norms, supporting and sustained by an array of international institutions which, in combination, present a system for the realisation of global public order. These volumes, arranged into five parts, bring together key writings which both illustrate and exemplify ideas that have informed the historical development of the discipline. The first part outlines three approaches, based on systems of natural laws, positivist systems and finally the system of 'public' international order. Parts two to four reflect aspects of the issues raised in this introduction in the context of a number of key areas of substantive law, these being sources, personality and jurisdiction and immunity. The final part then takes a look into the potential futures of international law and the international legal system from a variety of perspectives, including global administrative law, transgovernmentalism and public law conceptions of international order.

    Contents: Volume I: Introduction; Part I The Nature of International Law: Sovereignty, Hans Kelsen; The science of international law: its task and method, L. Oppenheim; Legal positivism as normative politics: international society, balance of power and Lassa Oppenheim's positive international law, Benedict Kingsbury; The Grotian tradition in international law, H. Lauterpacht; The United Nations Charter as constitution of the international community, Bardo Fassbender; Two liberalisms, Gerry Simpson; Policy considerations and the international judicial process, Rosalyn Higgins. Part II The Sources of International Law: Towards relative normativity in international law?, Prosper Weil; In defence of relative normativity: communitarian values and the Nicaragua case, John Tasioulas; Normative hierarchy in international law, Dinah Shelton; Universal international law, Jonathan I. Charney; Universality or integrity: some reflections on reservations to general multilateral treaties, Catherine Redgwell; Name index. Volume II: Part III Personality: The criteria for statehood in international law, James Crawford; The constitutive versus the declaratory theory of recognition: tertium non datur?, Stefan Talmon; The emerging right to democratic governance, Thomas M. Franck; The 'not-a-cat' syndrome: can the international human rights regime accommodate non-state actors?, Philip Alston. Part IV Jurisdiction and Immunity: Jurisdiction in international law, Michael Akehurst; US extraterritorial jurisdiction: the Helms-Burton and D'Amato Acts, Vaughan Lowe; The problem of jurisdictional immunities of foreign states, H. Lauterpacht; Immunity versus human rights: the Pinochet case, Andrea Bianchi; State immunity, human rights, and Jus Cogens: a critique of the normative hierarchy theory, Lee M. Caplan. Part V The Future of International Law: Global governance as administration - national and transnational approaches to global administrative law, Benedict Kingsbury, Nico Krisch, Richa

    Biography

    Patrick Capps and Malcolm Evans

    '...International Law is surely a commendable first step towards filling what is becoming a really irritating gap in international law literature.' Legal Studies