The question Is international law really law? has not proved troublesome, according to Hart, because a trivial question about the meaning of words has been mistaken for a serious question about the nature of things. Hart defends international law in Bentham\u27s terms as sufficiently analogous to municipal law. It is important to see in what way this analogy is viewed by Hart in order to determine whether the reasoning he offers is too high a price to pay for accepting a neo-positivist into the circle of those who hold that international law is really law
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...
International law has moved from the periphery to the center of public debate in the course of only ...
This article argues that, in the context of international law, Hart can really be considered a post-...
H.L.A. Hart says that The Concept of Law is focused on municipal or domestic law because that is the...
A reader of jurisprudence might conclude that only philosophers raise the question whether internati...
This chapter discusses the theory of international law. In analytic jurisprudence, at least since th...
What useful role (if any) could legal positivism play in the study or advancement of international l...
Positivism as a method to identify and interpret International law is nowadays often criticized. In ...
This Article addresses the fragmentation of international law and international legal theory. This p...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
In this paper, I argue against international normative positivism, i.e., against the idea that the s...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
International Legal Positivism in a Post-Modern World provides fresh perspectives on one of the most...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...
International law has moved from the periphery to the center of public debate in the course of only ...
This article argues that, in the context of international law, Hart can really be considered a post-...
H.L.A. Hart says that The Concept of Law is focused on municipal or domestic law because that is the...
A reader of jurisprudence might conclude that only philosophers raise the question whether internati...
This chapter discusses the theory of international law. In analytic jurisprudence, at least since th...
What useful role (if any) could legal positivism play in the study or advancement of international l...
Positivism as a method to identify and interpret International law is nowadays often criticized. In ...
This Article addresses the fragmentation of international law and international legal theory. This p...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
In this paper, I argue against international normative positivism, i.e., against the idea that the s...
Some scholars assume that the content and validity of international legal norms turns upon the exist...
The article examines how international law functions despite of decision-makers\u27 different concep...
International Legal Positivism in a Post-Modern World provides fresh perspectives on one of the most...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...
International law has moved from the periphery to the center of public debate in the course of only ...