Since the demise of philosophical foundationalism and that of the Aristotelian idea of an inner meaning of words, the scholarship about international law is no longer perceived as a mining activity geared towards the extraction of pre-existing meaning. Rather, international legal scholarship is in a state of fierce competition for persuasiveness and semantic authority. This does not elevate persuasiveness into the determinant of legality, nor does it lead to a total rejection of the internal point of view. The configuration of that competition for naming is informed by the current structure of (and the membership to) the interpretative community of international law. In this competition for naming, words constitute semantic weaponry. Mentio...
International legal scholars tend to think of their work as the interpretation of rules: the applica...
International Law, the law governing the relations of civilized states with one another, has been a ...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...
One of the oldest distinctions in philosophical discourse is that between words about words and w...
This Article seeks to shed some light on the reasons guiding scholars in their choices pertaining to...
Investigating the meaning of conceptual terms is an important task for legal scholars. Traditionally...
The Sentimental Life of International Law is about our age-old longing for a decent international so...
A reader of jurisprudence might conclude that only philosophers raise the question whether internati...
Concepts are an important element of the way international lawyers think and talk about internationa...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
This article analyses the relationship between international law and literature from the point of vi...
Histories of international law have typically focused on the origins of legal rules and doctrines, t...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
In the minds of many people the concept of international law is a conflict in terms. This is a syndr...
International legal scholars tend to think of their work as the interpretation of rules: the applica...
International Law, the law governing the relations of civilized states with one another, has been a ...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...
One of the oldest distinctions in philosophical discourse is that between words about words and w...
This Article seeks to shed some light on the reasons guiding scholars in their choices pertaining to...
Investigating the meaning of conceptual terms is an important task for legal scholars. Traditionally...
The Sentimental Life of International Law is about our age-old longing for a decent international so...
A reader of jurisprudence might conclude that only philosophers raise the question whether internati...
Concepts are an important element of the way international lawyers think and talk about internationa...
Confronted with the pluralization of the exercise of public authority at the international level and...
International legal scholarship has for so long taken the "Classical Question" of whether internatio...
This article analyses the relationship between international law and literature from the point of vi...
Histories of international law have typically focused on the origins of legal rules and doctrines, t...
International lawyers have looked at the study of their object by international relations scholars a...
In the minds of many people the concept of international law is a conflict in terms. This is a syndr...
International legal scholars tend to think of their work as the interpretation of rules: the applica...
International Law, the law governing the relations of civilized states with one another, has been a ...
The nineteenth-century doctrines known as international law developed out of the seventeenth-centu...