Description |
ix, 158 pages ; 24 cm |
Series |
Ashgate International Law series |
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Ashgate international law series.
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Contents |
Machine generated contents note: 1.Law, People, Peoples -- 2.From Hobbes to Rawls: Covenants, Social Contracts and the Law of Peoples -- 3.Historiography of the Present: Collectives, Colonies and the Chronicle of International Law -- 4.Grouphood, Rights and Waldron's Warning: Respecting the Collective -- 5.Statehood, Consent, Complicity: Defining the Collective -- 6.From Peoples to People? Self-determination, Identity, Territory -- 7.Cultures, Attachments, Minorities, Movements -- 8.International Relations and International Law: Rethinking Statehood and Sovereignty -- 9.Toward a Law of People |
Summary |
This book is concerned with how we can make sense of the confusing landscape of individualistic explanation in international law. Arguing that international law lacks the vocabulary to deal with the collective dimension and therefore perpetuates an individualistic vocabulary, the book develops and articulates a more appropriate collective approach for public international law. In doing so, it reframes longstanding problems such as the conflict between self-determination and the integrity of states and the effects and the limits of state sovereignty in an increasingly globalized world. Presenting fresh perspectives on a range of contemporary issues in international law, the book draws on the work of major contributors to legal and political theory |
Analysis |
Australian |
Notes |
Formerly CIP. Uk |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Subject |
International law -- Philosophy.
|
|
International law.
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LC no. |
2013015214 |
ISBN |
1409446476 (hardback : alk. paper) |
|
1409446484 (ebook) |
|
1472400798 (epub) |
|
9781409446477 (hardback : alk. paper) |
|
9781409446484 (ebook) |
|
9781472400796 (epub) |
|