Inicio > Derecho > Derecho internacional > Advancement of International Law
Advancement of International Law

Advancement of International Law

Charles Leben

153,84 €
IVA incluido
Consulta disponibilidad
Editorial:
Bloomsbury Publishing plc
Año de edición:
2010
Materia
Derecho internacional
ISBN:
9781841132785

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

Any talk of the advancement of international law presupposes that two objections are met. The first is the ’realist’ objection which, observing the state of international relations today, claims that when it comes down to the important things in international life - war and peace, and more generally power politics among states - no real advancement has been made. International society remains a society of sovereign states deciding matters with regard solely to their own best interests and with international law all too often being no more than a thin cloak cast over the precept that ’might is right.’ Against this excessive skepticism stands excessive optimism. International law is supposedly making giant strides forward, thanks especially to the tremendous mass of soft law generated by international organizations over the past 60 years and more. By incautiously mixing all manner of customs, treaties, resolutions, and recommendations, a picture of international law is painted that has little to do with the ’real world.’ This book is arranged into three sections. The first section shows, from the specific example of international investment law, that the past half-century has seen the invention of two genuinely new techniques in positive law: state contracts and transnational arbitration without privity. This is ’advancement’ in international law, not because the techniques are ’good’ in themselves (one may well think them ’bad’), but because they have introduced legal possibilities into international law that did not exist heretofore. The second section examines the theoretical consequences of those new legal techniques and especially the way they affect the theory of the state. The third section widens the field of view and asks whether European law has surpassed international law in a move towards federalism or whether it represents a step forward for international law. These reflections make for a clearer theoretical understanding of what constitutes true advancement in international law. Such an understanding should give pause both to those who argue that hardly any progress has been made and to those who are overly fanciful about progress.

Artículos relacionados

  • Comparative regulation, economic analysis, and applications of private equity in the united states and european union
    Irini Liakopoulou
    The present work examines the economics and legal doctrine of private equity. After a consideration of private equity’s origins, the book will explore the evolution of private equity in the United States and Europe. The reference economic model then will be reconstructed, with particular attention to financial flows to and from private equity firms and funds. This reconstructio...
  • Complicity in International Law
    Dimitris Liakopoulous
    Complicity in International Law aims to analyze questions arising from a state’s complicity in conflict with another state or an international organization. On the basis of international legal provisions, a state that assists the illicit fact of another state or an international organization in turn commits an offense if it is aware of the main fact and is bound by the same obl...
  • Command responsibility
    James B Whisker / Kevin R Spiker
    Command responsibility, or executive accountability, assumes that leaders are responsible for the actions of their subordinates. If subordinates misbehave, violate basic moral laws, transgress international law, or thwart international standards of behavior, their leader may be called before to justice. Standards that set the boundaries of human action have been evolving for ma...
  • International Organizations and Reparations
    Dimitris Liakopoulos
    In the first part of this book, noted legal scholar Dimtris Liakopoulos deals with reconstructing the legal regulatory framework governing human rights violations in the activities of organizations. After identifying rules that are generally applicable to organizations’ offenses and govern the profile of reparations, this study assesses primary rules that guarantee the right to...
  • International Organizations and Legal Sanctions Against Governments
    Dimitris Liakopoulos
    This book examines the relationship between governments and international organizations under international law. After surveying the policing powers of international organizations under international law, it illustrates some normative aspects of law that distinguish regulation from enforcement via study of recent legal cases before international judicial bodies. According to Di...
  • The EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation
    Andreas Reindl / Isabelle Van Damme
    'The EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation' is a pioneering manual authored by legal experts Andreas Reindl and Isabelle Van Damme. This essential guide, the first of its kind, is tailored for legal practitioners, offering a thorough exploration of the tools and mechanisms embedded within this novel European regulatory framework. The authors meticulously dissect the EU Foreign Subsid...