My topic today is the political element in international law, and its significance, both to law, and to legal education. I didn\u27t suppose, when the theme was chosen for me, long ago, that I should be talking in the midst of an international crisis entirely dominated by the politics of international law, or the law of international politics. My effort, however, will be to map the background of the crisis, not to offer simple and comforting solutions for our difficulties in the Middle East and Eastern Europe
Political scientists — primarily in the discipline’s international relations subfield — have long st...
Walter Russell Mead has recently observed that there are four fundamental strands of thought in US f...
Politics and law appear deeply entwined in contemporary international relations. Yet existing perspe...
My topic today is the political element in international law, and its significance, both to law, and...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
Shaping Foreign Policy in Times of Crisis grew out of a series of meetings that the authors convened...
The United States’ relationship with international law, although oft-discussed, is poorly understood...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
In a lecture delivered in May, 1978, Hans Morgenthau, one of the founders of a modem theory of power...
This article considers the idea that the professional and intellectual disciplines which have develo...
Confronting significant foreign policy questions, US international lawyers persistently frame their ...
This volume addresses the question as to where international law fits into the making and implementa...
The United States often appears hypocritical in its commitment to International Law. It supports Nur...
For some time, the word 'crisis' has been dominating international political discourse. But this is ...
As an academic, I have had the opportunity to reflect on the relevance of my experience to the acade...
Political scientists — primarily in the discipline’s international relations subfield — have long st...
Walter Russell Mead has recently observed that there are four fundamental strands of thought in US f...
Politics and law appear deeply entwined in contemporary international relations. Yet existing perspe...
My topic today is the political element in international law, and its significance, both to law, and...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
Shaping Foreign Policy in Times of Crisis grew out of a series of meetings that the authors convened...
The United States’ relationship with international law, although oft-discussed, is poorly understood...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
In a lecture delivered in May, 1978, Hans Morgenthau, one of the founders of a modem theory of power...
This article considers the idea that the professional and intellectual disciplines which have develo...
Confronting significant foreign policy questions, US international lawyers persistently frame their ...
This volume addresses the question as to where international law fits into the making and implementa...
The United States often appears hypocritical in its commitment to International Law. It supports Nur...
For some time, the word 'crisis' has been dominating international political discourse. But this is ...
As an academic, I have had the opportunity to reflect on the relevance of my experience to the acade...
Political scientists — primarily in the discipline’s international relations subfield — have long st...
Walter Russell Mead has recently observed that there are four fundamental strands of thought in US f...
Politics and law appear deeply entwined in contemporary international relations. Yet existing perspe...