Philosophy of International Law
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Description
This article emphasizes the task of framing some of the central issues of the philosophy of international law. It addresses the normative dimension of international law—the moral theory of international legal doctrine and institutions—not what Hart would call the analytic dimension, and not the epistemology of international law. It develops a concept of the relationship between normative theorizing about international law and the realities of the current state-centred international system. It articulates most of the issues a normative theory of international law must address, indicating the key choices, which a theorist faces, and thereby suggests an agenda for further research. It also discusses human rights, humanitarian intervention, and the conditions for the legitimacy of governments which will have direct and fairly obvious implications.
Source Publication
Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law
Source Editors/Authors
Jules L. Coleman, Scott J. Shapiro
Publication Date
2002
Recommended Citation
Buchanan, Allen and Golove, David, "Philosophy of International Law" (2002). Faculty Chapters. 739.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/739
