Law at the Vanishing Point: A Philosophical Analysis of International Law

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Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2008 M01 1 - 227 páginas
Two central questions are at the core of international legal theory: 'What is international law?', and the reality of international law, and, 'Is international law really law?'.This volume examines these critical questions and the philosophical foundations of modern international law using the tools of Anglo-American legal theory and western political thought. Engaging with both contemporary and historical legal theory and with an analysis of international law in action, the book builds an understanding and theory of law from the perspective of those who actually use this legal system and understand it, rather than constructing an artificial system from the standpoint of political scientists and moral philosophers. Law at the Vanishing Point provides a fascinating new challenge to those who reduce international law either to ethics or to politics and provides a critical new appraisal of its power as an independent force in human social relations.
 

Contenido

Conceptualizing International
29
Voluntarism and Natural
49
Humanitarian Intervention
95
Empiricism and the Reality of International Law
123
Pinochet and Nicaragua
145
The Prescriptive Realists
173
Conclusion
205
International Legal Personality
217
Index
223
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Professor Fichtelberg specializes in International Criminal Justice, Comparative Criminal Justice, and Legal Theory, in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, University of Delaware. He has published widely on aspects of International Criminal Law, and International Criminal Justice. He is the author of the textbook `Crimes Without Borders: An Introduction to International Criminal Justice'.

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