The Politics of International LawChristian Reus-Smit Cambridge University Press, 2004 M04 29 - 324 pages Politics and law appear deeply entwined in contemporary international relations. Yet existing perspectives struggle to understand the complex interplay between these aspects of international life. In this path-breaking volume, a group of leading international relations scholars and legal theorists advance a new constructivist perspective on the politics of international law. They reconceive politics as a field of human action that stands at the intersection of issues of identity, purpose, ethics, and strategy, and define law as an historically contingent institutional expression of such politics. They explain how liberal politics has conditioned modern international law and how law â€~feeds back' to constitute international relations and world politics. This new perspective on the politics of international law is illustrated through detailed case-studies of the use of force, climate change, landmines, migrant rights, the International Criminal Court, the Kosovo bombing campaign, international financial institutions, and global governance. |
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The politics of international law | 14 |
When states use armed force | 45 |
Soft law hard politics and the Climate Change Treaty | 80 |
Emerging customary norms and antipersonnel landmines | 106 |
International law politics and migrant rights | 131 |
The International Criminal Court | 151 |
Other editions - View all
Politics and International Law: Making, Breaking, and Upholding Global Rules Leslie Johns Limited preview - 2022 |
Common terms and phrases
action Alexander Wendt AP landmines argued argumentation framework Article behaviour bombing Cambridge chapter Christian Reus-Smit civilian claims climate change conception conflict constitutive constructivism constructivist context Convention critical customary international law customary law decisions discourse dispute resolution domestic ethics force Foreign framework GATT global governance human rights humanitarian intervention identity IFIs institutions interests International Criminal Court international law international legal international norms international politics International Relations international society interpretation issues Japan Japanese Journal of International jurisdiction justice Kosovo Kyoto Kyoto Protocol law and politics lawyers legal norms legal rules legitimacy legitimate Michael Michael Byers military moral multilateral NATO NATO's negotiations neoliberal neorealists obligation opinio juris organisations politics and law politics of international practice principles prosecutions prosecutor Protocol reasons regime relationship role Rome Security Council social Somalia sovereignty Stone Sweet structures targets ternational Theory tion tional treaty United Nations violations World Bank Yugoslavia