The author explores the empirical dilemma of international law; looking at international law based on consent and international customary law. The author concludes that international law faces a debilitating dilemma. On the one hand, its claim to objective authority as positive law rest upon its foundation in the customary practices of nations followed out of a sense of legal obligation. On the other hand, one can solve this problem by disconnecting international law from its foundation in custom, by looking back to its historical basis in natural law
This article argues that some familiar principles, like the protection of reasonable expectations or...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
In this article I make three related arguments. First, I argue that the traditional approach to the ...
For those who are not familiar with international law, just what it is or how it operates is often a...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
This article explores the evolution and role of contemporary international law vis-a-vis internation...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
This Article argues that traditional international law is healthy in the sense that there are more i...
If any one sentence about international law has stood the test of time, it is Louis Henkin’s: “almos...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
International law is built on the foundation of state consent. A state’s legal obligations are over...
This article argues that some familiar principles, like the protection of reasonable expectations or...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
In this article I make three related arguments. First, I argue that the traditional approach to the ...
For those who are not familiar with international law, just what it is or how it operates is often a...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
International and domestic law offer a study in contrasts: States\u27 legal obligations often depend...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
This article explores the evolution and role of contemporary international law vis-a-vis internation...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
This Article argues that traditional international law is healthy in the sense that there are more i...
If any one sentence about international law has stood the test of time, it is Louis Henkin’s: “almos...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
International law is built on the foundation of state consent. A state’s legal obligations are over...
This article argues that some familiar principles, like the protection of reasonable expectations or...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...