This article examines the development of the concept of recognition in the writings of British jurists. It first outlines methodologies of conceptual history as applied to international legal concepts, before examining four strands of development of the concept of recognition from the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. It shows how the concept of recognition moved from examining intra-European diplomatic disagreements, to a focus on Christianity, civilisation and progress that barred non-European communities, to a late colonial-era emphasis on technicalities of government and territory, and eventually a state-centric account that normalised inferiority into difference, before emerging in the interwar period as a ‘basic concept’ of i...
This thesis examines the development of international law. The analysis is undertaken through three...
The concept of state recognition in public international law has long been mired in a (pejoratively)...
The subject of the review was the recognition of States and representing their governments due to th...
This article examines the development of the concept of recognition in the writings of British juris...
© 2015 Martin ClarkThis thesis presents a conceptual history of recognition. It examines the develop...
During the past decade there has been a resurgence of interest in the concept of recognition in inte...
This article discusses the concept of misrecognition to analyse international legal ordering in the ...
Recognition plays a multifaceted role in international theory. In rarely communicating literatures, ...
This contribution argues that the European crisis in general and Brexit in particular, can be seen t...
The subject of recognition is basic to the way in which relations are conducted between states: they...
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the jur...
peer reviewedThis paper explores the partly colonial origins of European integration law. It first n...
The colonial and postcolonial realities of international law have been obscured by the analytical fr...
While the relationship between domestic and international law provoked constant debate among Europea...
The author argues that the problem of recognition of state sovereignty has been neglected in interna...
This thesis examines the development of international law. The analysis is undertaken through three...
The concept of state recognition in public international law has long been mired in a (pejoratively)...
The subject of the review was the recognition of States and representing their governments due to th...
This article examines the development of the concept of recognition in the writings of British juris...
© 2015 Martin ClarkThis thesis presents a conceptual history of recognition. It examines the develop...
During the past decade there has been a resurgence of interest in the concept of recognition in inte...
This article discusses the concept of misrecognition to analyse international legal ordering in the ...
Recognition plays a multifaceted role in international theory. In rarely communicating literatures, ...
This contribution argues that the European crisis in general and Brexit in particular, can be seen t...
The subject of recognition is basic to the way in which relations are conducted between states: they...
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the jur...
peer reviewedThis paper explores the partly colonial origins of European integration law. It first n...
The colonial and postcolonial realities of international law have been obscured by the analytical fr...
While the relationship between domestic and international law provoked constant debate among Europea...
The author argues that the problem of recognition of state sovereignty has been neglected in interna...
This thesis examines the development of international law. The analysis is undertaken through three...
The concept of state recognition in public international law has long been mired in a (pejoratively)...
The subject of the review was the recognition of States and representing their governments due to th...