Oxford handbook of the sources of international law
Oxford handbook of the sources of international law
Sources of international law
- London Oxford University Press 2017
- 1 online resource.
- Oxford handbooks online .
- Oxford handbooks online. .
Previously issued in print: 2017.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction / Sources in the Anti-Formalist Tradition: A Prelude to Institutional Discourses in International Law / Sources in the Anti-Formalist Tradition: 'That Monster Custom, Who Doth All Sense Doth Eat' / Sources in the Meta-History of International Law: A Phenomenological Reversal of Hegel—From Liberal Nihilism and the Anti-Metaphysics of Modernity to an Aristotelian Ethical Order / Sources in the Meta-History of International Law: A Little Meta-Theory—Paradigms, Article 38, and the Sources of International Law / Legal History as a Source: From Classical to Modern International Law / Legal History as a Source: The Politics of Knowledge / Sources in Legal Positivist Theories: Law as Necessarily Posited and the Challenge of Customary Law Creation / Sources in Legal Positivist Theories: The Pure Theory's Structural Analysis of the Law / Sources in Legal Formalist Theories: The Poor Vehicle of Legal Forms / Sources in Legal Formalist Theories: Source Formality, With Special Attention to International Law / Sources in the Scholastic Legacy: Ius Naturae and Ius Gentium Revisited by Theologians / Sources in Interpretation Theories: The International Law-Making Process / Sources in Interpretation Theories: An Interdependent Relationship / Sources in the Meta-Theory of International Law: Exploring the Hermeneutics, Authority, and Publicness of International Law / Sources in the Meta-Theory of International Law: Hermeneutical Conversations / Legal Theory as a Source: Institutional Facts and the Identification of International Law / Legal Theory as a Source: Doctrine as Constitutive of International Law / Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: What Makes Law 'International'? / Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Extra-Positive Norms / Sources and the Systematicity of International Law: A Philosophical Perspective / Sources and the Systematicity of International Law / Sources in the Scholastic Legacy: The (Re)construction of the Ius Gentium in the Second Scholastic / Sources and the Hierarchy of International Law: The Place of Peremptory Norms and Article 103 of the UN Charter Within the Sources of International Law / Sources and the Hierarchy of International Law: Source Preferences and Scales of Values / Sources and the Normativity of International Law: A Post-Foundational Perspective / Sources and the Normativity of International Law: From Validity to Justification / Sources and the Legitimate Authority of International Law: A Challenge to the 'Standard View'? / Sources and the Legitimate Authority of International Law: Democratic Legitimacy and the Sources of International Law / Sources and the Subjects of International Law: A Plurality of Law-Making Participants / Sources and the Subjects of International Law: The European Union's Semi-Autonomous System of Sources / Sources and the Enforcement of International Law: What Norms International Law-Enforcement Bodies Actually Invoke? / Sources and the Enforcement of International Law: Domestic Courts—Another Brick in the Wall? / Sources in the Modern Tradition: An Overview of the Sources of the Sources in the Classical Works of International Law / Sources of International Human Rights Law: How General is General International Law? / Sources of International Human Rights Law: Human Rights Treaties / Sources of International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law: Specific Features / Sources of International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law: War Crimes and the Limits of the Doctrine of Sources / Sources of International Environmental Law: Formality and Informality in the Dynamic Evolution of IEL Norms / Sources of International Environmental Law: Interactional Law / Sources of International Organizations' Law: Reflections on Accountability / Sources of International Organizations' Law: Why Custom and General Principles are Crucial / Sources of International Trade Law: Sources of Law in WTO Dispute Settlement / Sources of International Trade Law: Understanding What the Vienna Convention Says About Identifying and Using 'Sources for Treaty Interpretation' / Sources in the Modern Tradition: The Nature of Europe's Classical Law of Nations / Sources of International Investment Law: Theoretical Foundations of Unruly Practices / Sources of International Investment Law: Multilateralization, Arbitral Precedent, Comparativism, Soft Law / Sources of International Law in Domestic Law: Domestic Constitutional Structure and the Sources of International Law / Sources of International Law in Domestic Law: Relationship Between International and Municipal Law Sources / Sources in the 19th Century European Tradition: The Myth of Positivism / Sources in the 19th Century European Tradition: Insights from Practice and Theory / The History of Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice: 'A Purely Platonic Discussion'? / The History of Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice: The Journey from the Past to the Present / Samantha Besson, Jean d'Aspremont -- M�onica Garc�ia-Salmones Rovira -- Upendra Baxi -- Anthony Carty, Anna Irene Baka -- Mark Weston Janis -- Robert Kolb -- Samuel Moyn -- David Lefkowitz -- J�org Kammerhofer -- Jean d'Aspremont -- Frederick Schauer -- Peter Haggenmacher -- Ingo Venzke -- Duncan B. Hollis -- Matthias Goldmann -- Alexandra Kemmerer -- Iain Scobbie -- Alain Papaux, Eric Wyler -- Pierre d'Argent -- Mary Ellen O'Connell, Caleb Day -- Michael Giudice -- Gleider I. Hern�andez -- Annabel Brett -- Erika de Wet -- Mario Prost -- Detlef von Daniels -- Nicole Roughan -- Richard Collins -- Jos�e Luis Mart�i -- Robert McCorquodale -- Bruno de Witte -- Yuval Shany -- Antonios Tzanakopoulos, Eleni Methymaki -- Dominique Gaurier -- Samantha Besson -- Bruno Simma -- Rapha�el van Steenberghe -- Steven R. Ratner -- Catherine Redgwell -- Jutta Brunn�ee -- Jan Klabbers -- August Reinisch -- Joost Pauwelyn -- Donald H. Regan -- Randall Lesaffer -- Jorge E. Vi�nuales -- Stephan W. Schill -- Ingrid B. Wuerth -- Cedric Ryngaert -- Miloš Vec -- Lauri M�alksoo -- Ole Spiermann -- Malgosia Fitzmaurice.
This Oxford Handbook examines the sources of international law, how the understanding of sources changed throughout the history of international law; how the main legal theories understood sources; the relationship between sources and the legitimacy of international law; and how sources differ across the various sub-areas of international law.
Specialized.
9780191860263 No price
International law--Sources.
KZ64
341.1
Previously issued in print: 2017.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction / Sources in the Anti-Formalist Tradition: A Prelude to Institutional Discourses in International Law / Sources in the Anti-Formalist Tradition: 'That Monster Custom, Who Doth All Sense Doth Eat' / Sources in the Meta-History of International Law: A Phenomenological Reversal of Hegel—From Liberal Nihilism and the Anti-Metaphysics of Modernity to an Aristotelian Ethical Order / Sources in the Meta-History of International Law: A Little Meta-Theory—Paradigms, Article 38, and the Sources of International Law / Legal History as a Source: From Classical to Modern International Law / Legal History as a Source: The Politics of Knowledge / Sources in Legal Positivist Theories: Law as Necessarily Posited and the Challenge of Customary Law Creation / Sources in Legal Positivist Theories: The Pure Theory's Structural Analysis of the Law / Sources in Legal Formalist Theories: The Poor Vehicle of Legal Forms / Sources in Legal Formalist Theories: Source Formality, With Special Attention to International Law / Sources in the Scholastic Legacy: Ius Naturae and Ius Gentium Revisited by Theologians / Sources in Interpretation Theories: The International Law-Making Process / Sources in Interpretation Theories: An Interdependent Relationship / Sources in the Meta-Theory of International Law: Exploring the Hermeneutics, Authority, and Publicness of International Law / Sources in the Meta-Theory of International Law: Hermeneutical Conversations / Legal Theory as a Source: Institutional Facts and the Identification of International Law / Legal Theory as a Source: Doctrine as Constitutive of International Law / Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: What Makes Law 'International'? / Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Extra-Positive Norms / Sources and the Systematicity of International Law: A Philosophical Perspective / Sources and the Systematicity of International Law / Sources in the Scholastic Legacy: The (Re)construction of the Ius Gentium in the Second Scholastic / Sources and the Hierarchy of International Law: The Place of Peremptory Norms and Article 103 of the UN Charter Within the Sources of International Law / Sources and the Hierarchy of International Law: Source Preferences and Scales of Values / Sources and the Normativity of International Law: A Post-Foundational Perspective / Sources and the Normativity of International Law: From Validity to Justification / Sources and the Legitimate Authority of International Law: A Challenge to the 'Standard View'? / Sources and the Legitimate Authority of International Law: Democratic Legitimacy and the Sources of International Law / Sources and the Subjects of International Law: A Plurality of Law-Making Participants / Sources and the Subjects of International Law: The European Union's Semi-Autonomous System of Sources / Sources and the Enforcement of International Law: What Norms International Law-Enforcement Bodies Actually Invoke? / Sources and the Enforcement of International Law: Domestic Courts—Another Brick in the Wall? / Sources in the Modern Tradition: An Overview of the Sources of the Sources in the Classical Works of International Law / Sources of International Human Rights Law: How General is General International Law? / Sources of International Human Rights Law: Human Rights Treaties / Sources of International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law: Specific Features / Sources of International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law: War Crimes and the Limits of the Doctrine of Sources / Sources of International Environmental Law: Formality and Informality in the Dynamic Evolution of IEL Norms / Sources of International Environmental Law: Interactional Law / Sources of International Organizations' Law: Reflections on Accountability / Sources of International Organizations' Law: Why Custom and General Principles are Crucial / Sources of International Trade Law: Sources of Law in WTO Dispute Settlement / Sources of International Trade Law: Understanding What the Vienna Convention Says About Identifying and Using 'Sources for Treaty Interpretation' / Sources in the Modern Tradition: The Nature of Europe's Classical Law of Nations / Sources of International Investment Law: Theoretical Foundations of Unruly Practices / Sources of International Investment Law: Multilateralization, Arbitral Precedent, Comparativism, Soft Law / Sources of International Law in Domestic Law: Domestic Constitutional Structure and the Sources of International Law / Sources of International Law in Domestic Law: Relationship Between International and Municipal Law Sources / Sources in the 19th Century European Tradition: The Myth of Positivism / Sources in the 19th Century European Tradition: Insights from Practice and Theory / The History of Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice: 'A Purely Platonic Discussion'? / The History of Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice: The Journey from the Past to the Present / Samantha Besson, Jean d'Aspremont -- M�onica Garc�ia-Salmones Rovira -- Upendra Baxi -- Anthony Carty, Anna Irene Baka -- Mark Weston Janis -- Robert Kolb -- Samuel Moyn -- David Lefkowitz -- J�org Kammerhofer -- Jean d'Aspremont -- Frederick Schauer -- Peter Haggenmacher -- Ingo Venzke -- Duncan B. Hollis -- Matthias Goldmann -- Alexandra Kemmerer -- Iain Scobbie -- Alain Papaux, Eric Wyler -- Pierre d'Argent -- Mary Ellen O'Connell, Caleb Day -- Michael Giudice -- Gleider I. Hern�andez -- Annabel Brett -- Erika de Wet -- Mario Prost -- Detlef von Daniels -- Nicole Roughan -- Richard Collins -- Jos�e Luis Mart�i -- Robert McCorquodale -- Bruno de Witte -- Yuval Shany -- Antonios Tzanakopoulos, Eleni Methymaki -- Dominique Gaurier -- Samantha Besson -- Bruno Simma -- Rapha�el van Steenberghe -- Steven R. Ratner -- Catherine Redgwell -- Jutta Brunn�ee -- Jan Klabbers -- August Reinisch -- Joost Pauwelyn -- Donald H. Regan -- Randall Lesaffer -- Jorge E. Vi�nuales -- Stephan W. Schill -- Ingrid B. Wuerth -- Cedric Ryngaert -- Miloš Vec -- Lauri M�alksoo -- Ole Spiermann -- Malgosia Fitzmaurice.
This Oxford Handbook examines the sources of international law, how the understanding of sources changed throughout the history of international law; how the main legal theories understood sources; the relationship between sources and the legitimacy of international law; and how sources differ across the various sub-areas of international law.
Specialized.
9780191860263 No price
International law--Sources.
KZ64
341.1