From the traditionalist position on international law, a new form of compact agreement, which cannot be classified as an international treaty in terms of academic framework, had long fueled much of contention in politics, international law, and constitutional law. A growing practice of compact agreement had been natural as corresponding with the global compression of international community and rising aspiration of peace regime on the international relations. The scholars of international law believe that, regardless of whether the President of the United States is an internationalist or an isolationist, the enactment of international law in the 21st century will be based on more pragmatic rather than formal criteria. It is ...
In recent decades the demand has become increasingly insistent among scholars and others for develop...
Nine years ago, Kenneth Abbott published an article exhorting international lawyers to read and mast...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
From the traditionalist position on international law, a new form of compact agreement, which ...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
The article examines in detail the historical and theoretical approaches to the formation and develo...
A fierce debate ensues among leading international law theorists that implicates the role of nationa...
The vast majority of U.S. international agreements today are made by the President acting alone. Lit...
Abstract: Although this paper is entitled “The Transformation of International Law”, it does not put...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
International law is a set of rules intended to bind states in their relationships with each other. ...
There is a built-in paradox in the emergence of international law over the last decade as a core con...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
How does the United States enter and exit its international obligations? By the last days of the Oba...
In recent decades the demand has become increasingly insistent among scholars and others for develop...
Nine years ago, Kenneth Abbott published an article exhorting international lawyers to read and mast...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...
From the traditionalist position on international law, a new form of compact agreement, which ...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
The article examines in detail the historical and theoretical approaches to the formation and develo...
A fierce debate ensues among leading international law theorists that implicates the role of nationa...
The vast majority of U.S. international agreements today are made by the President acting alone. Lit...
Abstract: Although this paper is entitled “The Transformation of International Law”, it does not put...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
Traditional international law and its instruments are stagnating both in terms of quantity and quali...
International law is a set of rules intended to bind states in their relationships with each other. ...
There is a built-in paradox in the emergence of international law over the last decade as a core con...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
How does the United States enter and exit its international obligations? By the last days of the Oba...
In recent decades the demand has become increasingly insistent among scholars and others for develop...
Nine years ago, Kenneth Abbott published an article exhorting international lawyers to read and mast...
In its classical positivist tradition international law was not concerned with the internal structur...