Book Chapter Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Extra-Positive Norms, in The Oxford Handbook on the Sources of International Law 562 (Samantha Besson & Jean D’Aspremont eds., 2017). This chapter posits that international law, like all law, can be understood as a hybrid of positive and natural law. The history of natural law from Ancient Greece to today’s global community reveals that the method used for centuries to explain extra-positive features of law consists of three integral elements. The method uses reason, reflection on nature, and openness to transcendence. Certain contemporary natural law theorists, however, prefer to focus on reason and nature alone. Yet, the history of natural l...
The question of the sources of international law inevitably raises some well-known scholarly controv...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...
An age-old dispute persists over a fundamental problem of jurisprudence: what makes law law at its g...
Book Chapter Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Ex...
From the Publisher This chapter posits that international law, like all law, can be understood as a ...
From the Publisher Legal theorists in the 19th century attempted to create European international la...
From the Publisher A common view holds that law within nation-states consists of positive law and co...
This Article discusses natural law, the foundation of many international law principles. First, it ...
The affinity of international law to natural law goes back a long way to the classic writers of inte...
Many elements of current positive public international law (PIL) originated in theories of natural l...
The term ‘natural law’ has historically led to a great deal of confusion. This is partly due to the ...
The Nuremberg Trials of leading National Socialists established the principle that individuals may b...
What useful role (if any) could legal positivism play in the study or advancement of international l...
The basic philosophical vision and ethical principles of Catholic Natural Law claim universality. Na...
The basic philosophical vision and ethical principles of Catholic Natural Law claim universality. Na...
The question of the sources of international law inevitably raises some well-known scholarly controv...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...
An age-old dispute persists over a fundamental problem of jurisprudence: what makes law law at its g...
Book Chapter Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Ex...
From the Publisher This chapter posits that international law, like all law, can be understood as a ...
From the Publisher Legal theorists in the 19th century attempted to create European international la...
From the Publisher A common view holds that law within nation-states consists of positive law and co...
This Article discusses natural law, the foundation of many international law principles. First, it ...
The affinity of international law to natural law goes back a long way to the classic writers of inte...
Many elements of current positive public international law (PIL) originated in theories of natural l...
The term ‘natural law’ has historically led to a great deal of confusion. This is partly due to the ...
The Nuremberg Trials of leading National Socialists established the principle that individuals may b...
What useful role (if any) could legal positivism play in the study or advancement of international l...
The basic philosophical vision and ethical principles of Catholic Natural Law claim universality. Na...
The basic philosophical vision and ethical principles of Catholic Natural Law claim universality. Na...
The question of the sources of international law inevitably raises some well-known scholarly controv...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...
An age-old dispute persists over a fundamental problem of jurisprudence: what makes law law at its g...