Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explained by general rules, with predictive value? Or does it require the exercise of judgment, in order to account for the richness and complexity of international life? Traditionally, international lawyers have gravitated to the latter view, analyzing issues in an essentially ad hoc and eclectic manner. In their controversial new book, THE LIMITS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, Jack Goldsmith and Eric Posner argue forcefully for a more scientific approach, relying on the methodology known as rational choice theory. The article examine the book\u27s ambition to develop an overarching theory of international law, which reduces the role played by international ...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
International lawyers are used to having their discipline dismissed. A conspicuous strand of thought...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
When international relations scholars think about international law they either ignore culture or of...
In this review essay, we use Eric Posner and Alan Sykes\u27 Economic Foundations of International La...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
International lawyers are used to having their discipline dismissed. A conspicuous strand of thought...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
Is the study of international law an art or a science? Can the role of international law be explaine...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
The Limits of International Law sets forth a general theory of international law. The book rejects t...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
Jack Goldsmith of Harvard Law School and Eric Posner of the University of Chicago Law School articul...
States, therefore, have no innate preference for complying with international law, they are unaffect...
When international relations scholars think about international law they either ignore culture or of...
In this review essay, we use Eric Posner and Alan Sykes\u27 Economic Foundations of International La...
An increasing number of scholars have begun to apply rational choice methodologies to the study of...
Problem setting. Different directions of modern science of international law explore the problem of ...
International lawyers are used to having their discipline dismissed. A conspicuous strand of thought...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...