"This volume provides an innovative and engaging way of assessing the development of international law scholarship and practice to date and its potential future development by focusing upon the 'leading works' of the discipline. International law has established itself as an important area of academic study and legal practice. Given its academic, legal and everyday significance and its prolific role within law school teaching and research, it is important to question and analyse the development of international law, exploring the complex and shifting interplay between law, policy, theory and culture and the role of international and national actors within a diverse and dynamic community of nations. This collection presents contributions from leading scholars of public international law across the globe and the works chosen by the editor represent a diverse range of subjects within the broader discipline. Each chapter analyses the importance and legacy of a specific work, with a view to reflecting upon how that publication has contributed to shaping the broader literature in the field of international law and how it may continue to have an influence on both scholarship and practice in the future. Taken as a whole, the chapters included in this collection provide an original exploration of a variety of important themes about how the discipline has evolved over time. The Prologue and Epilogue critically assess the development of international law in light of the reflections by contributors. The book will bea valuable resource for lawyers, international law practitioners, students, and academics alike"--
This volume provides an innovative and engaging way of assessing the development of international law scholarship and practice by focusing on the ‘leading works’ of the discipline. It presents contributions from leading scholars of public international law and the works discussed represent a diverse range of subjects within the broader discipline.
This volume provides an innovative and engaging way of assessing the development of international law scholarship and practice to date and its potential future development by focusing upon the ‘leading works’ of the discipline. International law has established itself as an important area of academic study and legal practice. Given its academic, legal and everyday significance and its prolific role within law school teaching and research, it is important to question and analyse the development of international law, exploring the complex and shifting interplay between law, policy, theory and culture and the role of international and national actors within a diverse and dynamic community of nations. This collection presents contributions from leading scholars of public international law across the globe and the works chosen by the editor represent a diverse range of subjects within the broader discipline. Each chapter analyses the importance and legacy of a specific work, with a view to reflecting upon how that publication has contributed to shaping the broader literature in the field of international law and how it may continue to have an influence on both scholarship and practice in the future. Taken as a whole, the chapters included in this collection provide an original exploration of a variety of important themes about how the discipline has evolved over time. The Prologue and Epilogue critically assess the development of international law in light of the reflections by contributors. The book will be a valuable resource for lawyers, international law practitioners, students, and academics alike.
Foreword;
1. Prologue;
2. The International Law of Occupation;
3. The
Creation of States in International Law;
4. The Internationalists: How a
Radical Plan to Outlaw War Remade the World;
5. Treaty Withdrawals in a
Turbulent World: A Retrospective on Exiting Treaties;
6. The Object of
Critique: What is International Law?;
7. Before and After Vengeance and
Forgiveness;
8. On the Frontlines: Gender, War and the Post-Conflict
Process;
9. Newness, Imperialism, and International Legal Reform in Our Time:
A TWAIL Perspective;
10. Evidence for Hope: Making Human Rights Work in the
21st Century;
11. Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic
Politics;
12. Battling Against Power: The International Law on Foreign
Investment;
13. Epilogue; Index
Donna Lyons (Attorney-at-Law, New York; PhD, Trinity College Dublin; LLM, New York University; LLB, Trinity College Dublin has held academic appointments at several Irish and international law schools. Donnas research interests include public international law, international human rights law, and international criminal law, and well as numerous aspects of Irish law and policy, and she has published, presented, and been awarded competitive research funding both domestically and internationally within these fields.