Critics of realist and rational choice approaches to international law argue that if nations were motivated entirely by power or self-interest, their leaders would not make moral and legal arguments because no one would believe them. Thus, the prevalence of moral and legal rhetoric on the international stage refutes the behavioral assumptions of realism and rational choice. This paper argues that even if nations are not motivated by a desire to comply with morality or law, the use of moral and legal arguments could occur in equilibrium. Signaling and cheap talk models show that nations may engage in talk in order (1) to deflect suspicion that they have unstable political systems or adversarial interests, and (2) to coordinate when gains fro...
This thesis seeks to make an original contribution towards understanding the position of morality in...
A review of: Argument and Change in World Politics: Ethics, Decolonization, and Humanitarian Interve...
This paper considers the implications of Chiara Lepora and Robert Goodin\u27s On Complicity and Comp...
Critics of realist and rational choice approaches to international law argue that if nations were mo...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Part I of this Review sets forth Guzman\u27s general theory of international law with specific consi...
In this review essay, we use Eric Posner and Alan Sykes\u27 Economic Foundations of International La...
This Essay advances an argument for rethinking the current terms of engagement of U.S. foreign polic...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
In the realist game of international negotiations, each state attempts to promote their interest reg...
Recent studies have highlighted the instrumental use of language, wherein actors deploy claims to st...
How should guide ones actions on the international arena? What are the relations between morality an...
The recent turn of politics and philosophy to serious appraisals of international law is welcome new...
Rational choice approaches to customary international law have gained in prominence in recent years....
This paper is a response to Jack L. Goldsmith and Eric A. Posner, \u27The Limits of International La...
This thesis seeks to make an original contribution towards understanding the position of morality in...
A review of: Argument and Change in World Politics: Ethics, Decolonization, and Humanitarian Interve...
This paper considers the implications of Chiara Lepora and Robert Goodin\u27s On Complicity and Comp...
Critics of realist and rational choice approaches to international law argue that if nations were mo...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Part I of this Review sets forth Guzman\u27s general theory of international law with specific consi...
In this review essay, we use Eric Posner and Alan Sykes\u27 Economic Foundations of International La...
This Essay advances an argument for rethinking the current terms of engagement of U.S. foreign polic...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
In the realist game of international negotiations, each state attempts to promote their interest reg...
Recent studies have highlighted the instrumental use of language, wherein actors deploy claims to st...
How should guide ones actions on the international arena? What are the relations between morality an...
The recent turn of politics and philosophy to serious appraisals of international law is welcome new...
Rational choice approaches to customary international law have gained in prominence in recent years....
This paper is a response to Jack L. Goldsmith and Eric A. Posner, \u27The Limits of International La...
This thesis seeks to make an original contribution towards understanding the position of morality in...
A review of: Argument and Change in World Politics: Ethics, Decolonization, and Humanitarian Interve...
This paper considers the implications of Chiara Lepora and Robert Goodin\u27s On Complicity and Comp...