
International Rules brings together exemplary works from the most prominent approaches to international rules of International Law and International Relations disciplines. Included are chapters on Natural Law, Legal Positivism, Classical Realism, the New Haven School, Institutionalism, Structural Realism, the New Stream, and Feminist Voices. Each of the eight chapters begins with a brief overview, offers a representative work or works, and concludes with a selected bibliography. From Hugo Grotius to David Kennedy, from George Kennan to Robert Keohane, the featured authors provide valuable insights into their common subject: international rules. Despite divergent methods and objectives, they address fundamentally the same questions: What is the nature of such rules? What is their purpose? How do they originate? What role, if any, do they play in politics? Framing the selections assembled are two original chapter-length essays. The first chapter of this volume assesses the prospects for interdisciplinary collaboration; the final one suggests a direction for future research.
This volume investigates the fundamental nature, origin, and political utility of international rules by synthesizing diverse theoretical frameworks from the disciplines of law and international relations. The authors, Anthony Clark Arend, Robert D. Vander Lugt, and Robert J. Beck, curate a collection of seminal texts to bridge the gap between legal theory and political science. By examining perspectives ranging from classical natural law to contemporary feminist critiques, the text provides a structured comparison of how different schools of thought interpret the function of global governance. The work serves as a comprehensive analytical framework for understanding the intersection of normative legal standards and real-world political behavior.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this volume as a valuable pedagogical tool for students and researchers seeking to navigate the complex theoretical landscape of international order. Readers frequently note the clarity of the editorial framing, which successfully synthesizes disparate academic traditions into a coherent comparative study.
Page Count:
328
Publication Date:
1996-04-25
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019508540X
ISBN-13:
9780195085402
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