bookFeb 3, 2005Closed access

The Limits of International Law

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Abstract

Abstract The Limits of International Law argues that international law matters but that its scope and significance is far less than assumed by academics, the media, and many public officials. Adopting a rational choice framework, the authors show that international law is a term that we use to refer to variously circumscribed cases of international cooperation. States are able to cooperate through international law but only under narrow conditions; much of international law merely ratifies existing relationships, and has no independent normative force. Indeed, recent efforts to replace international politics with law and judicial process rests on a misunderstanding of the past accomplishments of international…

Citation impact

821
total citations
FWCI
32.18
Percentile
100%
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0
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • International law
  • Law
  • Political science
  • Municipal law
  • Public law
  • Normative
  • Comparative law
  • Public international law
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