Fr. 165.00

Liberal-Welfarist Law of Nations - A History of International Law

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Emmanuelle Jouannet is a Professor of International Law at the Sorbonne, where she currently directs the interdisciplinary programme 'International Law and Justice in a Global World'. Klappentext Emmanuelle Jouannet explores the concept of international law from the European Enlightenment to the post-Cold War world. Zusammenfassung Emmanuelle Jouannet identifies the forces that have driven the development of international law from the Enlightenment to the present day and examines the ambivalence between its position as neither a strictly welfarist nor a strictly liberal law. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; Part I. The Modern Law of Nations: 1. The law of nations of the Moderns: a new discipline; 2. The liberal purpose of the modern law of nations: liberty, equality and security for states; 3. State interests and self-esteem; 4. The modern law of nations between free-enterprise and protectionism; 5. The welfarist purpose of the modern law of nations: the happiness of the people and the advancement of states; 6. Cooperation and assistance to states between liberalism and welfarism; 7. The liberal-welfarist law of nations: a code of good conduct to discipline European states; 8. Goodness, freedom and justice; Conclusion; Part II. Classical International Law: 9. A modern commentator turned classical: the Vattelian moment; 10. The triumph of the liberal purpose of international law; 11. Liberal international law outflanked. A welfarist purpose for the rest of the world; 12. Intellectual and political explanations and justifications for the change; 13. Classical international law in the age of free-enterprise: between free-trade and protectionism; 14. Liberal vision, dogmatic foundation and the appeal of liberalism; 15. Concerns about social and economic inequality. The emergence of a new welfarist purpose; 16. The emergence of concerns for human rights; Conclusion; Part III. Contemporary International Law: 17. Continuities and discontinuities of the classical model; 18. The two liberal purposes of contemporary international law; 19. The dilemmas of the new liberal purpose (I): democracy, human rights and the rule of law; 20. The dilemmas of the new liberal purpose (II): humanitarian interventions, identities and cultures; 21. The status report and general prospects for the new liberal and democratic purpose; 22. The economic liberalism of contemporary international law: between Keynesian objectives and the triumph of free trade; 23. The general advancement of the welfarist purpose: characteristics and difficulties; 24. The specific advancement of the welfarist purpose: Third World(s) and development; Conclusion....

Product details

Authors Emmanuelle Jouannet, Emmanuelle (Universite De Paris I) Jouannet, Jouannet Emmanuelle
Assisted by Christopher Sutcliffe (Translation), Sutcliffe Christopher (Translation)
Publisher Cambridge University Press ELT
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 26.01.2012
 
EAN 9781107018945
ISBN 978-1-107-01894-5
No. of pages 326
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Law > Mercantile and commercial law

POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, LAW / International, LAW / Public, International Relations, Public International Law

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