
Traditionally, Legitimacy Has Been Associated Exclusively With States. But Are States Actually Legitimate? And In Light Of The Legalization Of International Norms Why Should Discussions Of Legitimacy Focus Only On The Nation-state? The Essays In This Collection Examine The Nature Of Legitimacy, The Legitimacy Of The State, And The Legitimacy Of Supranational Institutions. The Collection Begins By Asking: What Sort Of Problem Is Legitimacy? Part I Considers Competing Theories, In Particular The Work Of John Rawls. Part Ii Looks At The Legitimacy Of State Apparatus, Its Institutions, Officials, And The Rule Of Law, And The Future Of State Sovereignty. Part Iii Expands The Scope Of Legitimacy Beyond The State To Supranational Institutions And International Law. Written By Theorists Of Considerable Standing, The Essays In This Volume Will Be Of Interest To Students And Scholars Of Law, Politics, And Philosophy Looking For Ways Of Approaching The Problem Of How Extra-territorial Affairs Affect A State's Written And Unwritten Agreements With Its Citizens In A World Where Laws And Norms With Legal Effect Are Increasingly Made Beyond The State.
This collection investigates whether the traditional focus on the nation-state as the sole locus of legitimacy remains valid in an era of increasing international legal norms. The editors, Kevin Walton, Michael Sevel, and Wojciech Sadurski, curate a series of essays from prominent legal and political theorists to evaluate the shifting boundaries of authority. The volume provides a structured framework for analyzing how supranational institutions and global legal norms challenge the internal sovereignty and social contracts of individual states.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this volume as a rigorous academic resource for students and scholars of jurisprudence and political theory. Readers frequently note the high level of intellectual density in the prose, which assumes a foundational understanding of contemporary political philosophy.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192559044
ISBN-13:
9780192559043
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