In the early years of the last century, the United States was among the leading states promoting the development of legal regimes and institutions to bring about the peaceful resolution of disputes between nations. Our later failure to join the League of Nations reflected the reluctance of many of our citizens, then as now, to allow decisions about our vital national interests to be made by any but our own elected leaders. Later still, however, in the years following World War II, the United States exerted its influence to negotiate treaties to create international obligations and set up institutions to manage international relations on an unprecedented scale. These efforts reflected confidence that international agreements and dispute reso...
Changes in international relations are creating a context for a new role for law. The exigencies of ...
The international legal system is reinventing itself in the aftermath of the Cold War. The United St...
Book Announcement The United States does not always accept the rule of law in international affairs,...
In the early years of the last century, the United States was among the leading states promoting the...
Following the interwar period and disastrous results of an isolationist foreign policy, the United S...
The United States’ relationship with international law, although oft-discussed, is poorly understood...
There are those, John Bolton and Paul Stephan among them, who worry that international law poses som...
The increasing role that the US plays in the world can only mean a correspondingly greater role for ...
With the Cold War over, Americans have grown more introspective about the role of the United States ...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
This article suggests that international law should be elevated from its current status as an occasi...
Elihu Root was the paragon of the legalist era in American foreign policy, which saw the strengtheni...
The topic of this year\u27s International Law Weekend, The United States and International Law: Leg...
Modern technology contracts the world, and as borders become more porous, an international rule of l...
This Article is adapted from a lecture delivered on October 12, 1990, at the Columbus School of Law,...
Changes in international relations are creating a context for a new role for law. The exigencies of ...
The international legal system is reinventing itself in the aftermath of the Cold War. The United St...
Book Announcement The United States does not always accept the rule of law in international affairs,...
In the early years of the last century, the United States was among the leading states promoting the...
Following the interwar period and disastrous results of an isolationist foreign policy, the United S...
The United States’ relationship with international law, although oft-discussed, is poorly understood...
There are those, John Bolton and Paul Stephan among them, who worry that international law poses som...
The increasing role that the US plays in the world can only mean a correspondingly greater role for ...
With the Cold War over, Americans have grown more introspective about the role of the United States ...
The recent developments in Eastern Europe and the Persian Gulf dramatize the efforts of the United S...
This article suggests that international law should be elevated from its current status as an occasi...
Elihu Root was the paragon of the legalist era in American foreign policy, which saw the strengtheni...
The topic of this year\u27s International Law Weekend, The United States and International Law: Leg...
Modern technology contracts the world, and as borders become more porous, an international rule of l...
This Article is adapted from a lecture delivered on October 12, 1990, at the Columbus School of Law,...
Changes in international relations are creating a context for a new role for law. The exigencies of ...
The international legal system is reinventing itself in the aftermath of the Cold War. The United St...
Book Announcement The United States does not always accept the rule of law in international affairs,...