An edition of When international law works (2012)

When international law works

realistic idealism after 9/11 and the global recession

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Last edited by MARC Bot
March 8, 2023 | History
An edition of When international law works (2012)

When international law works

realistic idealism after 9/11 and the global recession

"When International Law Works stands to change the way states and scholars look at this contentious topic. In this seminal work, Professor Tai-Heng Cheng addresses the current international law debates and transcends them. Working from influential statements on international law by such scholars as Goldsmith, Posner, O'Connell, and Guzman, Cheng presents a new framework that states should consider when they confront an international problem that implicates the often competing interests of both their own communities and the global legal order. Instead of advocating for or against international law as legitimate or binding, as many commentators do, Cheng acknowledges both its shortcomings and benefits while presenting a practical means of deciding whether compliance in a given circumstance is beneficial, moral, or necessary. To demonstrate how his new proposal for approaching international law would work in a real crisis, Cheng provides numerous case studies from contemporary history that test his theory. Ranging topically from the current global economic crisis to the West's war on jihadist terrorism, these detailed and demonstrative case studies set this book apart from similar works of international legal scholarship. By combining theory with practice, When International Law Works gives policymakers, academics, and students 'real world' guidance on how to face new global problems. In doing so, this new book challenges readers to rethink the role of law in an increasingly crisis-driven world"--

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
341

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Previews available in: English

Book Details


Table of Contents

Chapter One: Confronting Anxieties About International Law
I. The Relevance and Irrelevance of Law
II. Contemporary Debates
III. Thesis
A. The Central Case
B. Effectiveness
C. Legitimacy
IV. Terms
V. Outline of Inquiry
VI. Conclusion
Chapter Two: The Politics of Theorizing
I. A Historical Survey
II. Antiquity
III. Middle Ages
IV. Early Modernism
V. Late Modernism
VI. Post-Modernism
VII. Choices in Theorizing
VIII. Political and Normative Values in Theorizing
IX. Conclusion
Chapter Three: Legalism and Morality
I. Framing the Inquiry
II. Choices
III. Legalism
A. The UN Security Council
B. International Court of Justice
C. Conclusions About Legalism
IV. The Morality of International Law
A. Basic Values
B. Moral Obligations
C. Realist Critiques
D. Liberal Critique
E. Legal Obligations
V. Guidance to Officials
A. Morality
B. Institutional Functions
C. Effectiveness
D. The Indeterminacy Paradox
VI. Conclusion
Chapter Four: Judges
I. Theory
A. Judicial Functions
B. General Morality
C. Specific Morality
D. Effectiveness
II. Praxis
A. The Pedra Branca Case
1. Legalism
2. Morality
3. Effectiveness
B. The Nicaragua Case
1. Legalism
a. Provisional Measures
b. El Salvador's Intervention
c. Decision on Jurisdiction
d. Merits
2. Effectiveness
3. Morality
4. Feedback Loops
C. The Avena Case
1. Legalism
2. Effectiveness
3. Morality
4. Feedback Loops
III. Conclusion
Chapter Five: Arbitrators
I. Theory
A. Arbitral Functions
B. General Morality
C. Specific Morality
D. Effectiveness
II. Praxis.
A. United States-Stainless Steel (Mexico), Implementing Award
B. Loewen Group, Inc. v. United States of America
C. CMS Gas Transmission Co. v. Argentine Republic, Decision on Annulment
III. Conclusion.
Chapter Six: Regulators
I. Theory
II. Praxis
A. The Global Financial Crisis
B Responses and Decisions of Regulators
C. The Financial Stability Board
D. Guidance for Regulators
III. Conclusion
Chapter Seven: Legal Advisors
I. Theory
A. The Legal Advisor's Functions
B. General Morality
C. Specific Morality
D. Interests and Effectiveness
II. Praxis
A. Abu Ghraib Prison
B. Waterboarding
1. Factual Assumptions
2. International Legal Prescriptions
3. The Interrogation Memoranda
4. General Morality
5. Specific Morality
6. Guidance to Advisors
7. Alternative Scenarios
III. Conclusion
Chapter Eight: Officials
I. Theory
II. Praxis
A. The 1990 Gulf War
1. Specific Morality
2. General Morality and Effectiveness
3. Feedback Loops
B. NATO Bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
1 General Morality
2. Specific Morality
3. Feedback Loops
C. The 2003 Invasion of Iraq
1. General Morality
2. Specific Morality
3. Feedback Loops
III. Conclusion
Chapter Nine: Law Beyond Laws
I. Reframing Debates
II. Situating Among Theories
III. Results from Case Studies
IV. Conclusion.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 303-326) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
341
Library of Congress
KZ3410 .C47 2012, KZ3410.C47 2011

The Physical Object

Pagination
xv, 341 p. ;
Number of pages
341

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25194229M
Internet Archive
wheninternationa0000chen
ISBN 13
9780195370171
LCCN
2011022503
OCLC/WorldCat
721887614

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History

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