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The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law Dr Richard Collins

The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law By Dr Richard Collins

The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law by Dr Richard Collins


Summary

This book sets out a plea for lawyers to understand the purpose and potential of international law on its own terms.

The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law Summary

The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law by Dr Richard Collins

Modern international law is widely understood as an autonomous system of binding legal rules. Nevertheless, this claim to autonomy is far from uncontroversial. International lawyers have faced recurrent scepticism as to both the reality and efficacy of the object of their study and practice. For the most part, this scepticism has focussed on international laws peculiar institutional structure, with the absence of centralised organs of legislation, adjudication and enforcement, leaving international legal rules seemingly indeterminate in the conduct of international politics. Perception of this institutional problem has therefore given rise to a certain disciplinary angst or self-defensiveness, fuelling a need to seek out functional analogues or substitutes for the kind of institutional roles deemed intrinsic to a functioning legal system. The author of this book believes that this strategy of accommodation is, however, deeply problematic. It fails to fully grasp the importance of international laws decentralised institutional form in securing some measure of accountability in international relations. It thus misleads through functional analogy and, in doing so, potentially exacerbates legitimacy deficits. There are enough conceptual weaknesses and blindspots in the legal-theoretical models against which international law is so frequently challenged to show that the perceived problem arises more in theory, than in practice.

About Dr Richard Collins

Richard Collins is a Lecturer in Law at University College Dublin.

Table of Contents

Part I: Origins 1. A Fragile Autonomy: International Law at the Turn of the Twentieth Century 2. Scepticism and Renewal: International Law in the Inter-bellum Period 3. The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law Part II: Cause 4. Presuming Hierarchy: The Problematic Concept of the Legal Official 5. A Functional Jurisprudence? Methodological Controversies in Contemporary Legal Theory 6. Laws Creation Myth: Instrumental Reasoning and the Necessary Autonomy of Law Part III: Effect 7. Domestic Analogy, the Rule of Law and the Relations Between States 8. Form and Function in the Institutionalisation of International Law 9. International Law as Governance: An Emerging Legitimacy Crisis?

Additional information

NLS9781509927920
9781509927920
1509927921
The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law by Dr Richard Collins
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2019-04-18
304
N/A
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