Send back the lifeboats: confronting the project of saving international law
| Authors | |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 2015 |
| Series | Amsterdam Law School Legal Studies research paper, 2015-15 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Publisher | Amsterdam: Amsterdam Center for International Law, University of Amsterdam |
| Organisations |
|
| Abstract |
This piece critically evaluates the inclination of international lawyers to feel that international law needs to be saved. In doing so, it provides some observations on the self-destructive processes of international law. This piece constitutes a response to an article entitled "Groundwork for International Law" in which Anthony D’Amato offers a comprehensive account of how international law is formed and structured. Parts I and II sketch the various facets and implications of D’Amato’s self-preserving international law as well as highlight its originality in Anglo-American scholarship. In part III, this response proposes a more nuanced understanding of how international law "preserves" itself. Part IV makes the argument that if some self-preserving aspects exist, they are the product of the collective attitudes of the professional groups organized around international law but are not intrinsic to international law itself. Because I posit that we cannot possibly have any meta-standpoint to (in)validate and rank conceptions of international law, I conclude in part V with some critical reflections on what D’Amato’s conception means for those twenty-first-century international lawyers who feel that international law needs to be saved.
|
| Document type | Working paper |
| Note | ACIL Research Paper 2015-07. - May 7, 2015 |
| Language | English |
| Published at | http://ssrn.com/abstract=2603669 |
| Downloads |
SSRN-id2603669
(Accepted author manuscript)
|
| Permalink to this page | |