One key similarity between natural law and international law is that they seek to obtain a stable social order without the intervention of any state authority capable of issuing and enforcing its commands to those subject to its rule. Among ordinary individuals in a state of nature that weakness tends to lead to a stripped-down libertarian regime that features simple rules of acquisition, contract, and protection. The system gains its relative stability from the brute fact that between rough equals the part in the defensive posture will win out, so that great disparities in power are needed to disrupt the basic equilibrium. Similar constraints apply to nations in international affairs. Only within sovereign states is it possible to seek (bu...
Private international law presents a dilemma for legal and political philosophy. Legal and political...
__Abstract__ The private ordering and public regulation of private international law situations h...
This Article begins with the premise that international law is the net result of global processes of...
One key similarity between natural law and international law is that they seek to obtain a stable so...
One keg similarity between natural law and international law is that they seek to obtain a stable so...
Public International Law overshadows what we are accustomed, rightly or wrongly, to term Private Int...
Law (that is, human law looking to political ends), is in none of its branches an exact science. It ...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
The aim of this project is to explore the ways in which, in the absence of traditional forms of gove...
The affinity of international law to natural law goes back a long way to the classic writers of inte...
The domain of international law has expanded to encompass matters traditionally thought to be within...
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European Union and of free-trade...
Does legal order always need the enforcement power of the State? The concept of private order says n...
Book Chapter Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Ex...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
Private international law presents a dilemma for legal and political philosophy. Legal and political...
__Abstract__ The private ordering and public regulation of private international law situations h...
This Article begins with the premise that international law is the net result of global processes of...
One key similarity between natural law and international law is that they seek to obtain a stable so...
One keg similarity between natural law and international law is that they seek to obtain a stable so...
Public International Law overshadows what we are accustomed, rightly or wrongly, to term Private Int...
Law (that is, human law looking to political ends), is in none of its branches an exact science. It ...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
The aim of this project is to explore the ways in which, in the absence of traditional forms of gove...
The affinity of international law to natural law goes back a long way to the classic writers of inte...
The domain of international law has expanded to encompass matters traditionally thought to be within...
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European Union and of free-trade...
Does legal order always need the enforcement power of the State? The concept of private order says n...
Book Chapter Sources and the Legality and Validity of International Law: Natural Law as Source of Ex...
Many writers believe that international law is precatory but not binding in the way domestic law i...
Private international law presents a dilemma for legal and political philosophy. Legal and political...
__Abstract__ The private ordering and public regulation of private international law situations h...
This Article begins with the premise that international law is the net result of global processes of...