Edward Elgar recently published a Research Handbook on the Theory and History of International Law (560 p.), edited by Alexander Orakhelashvili (University of Birmingham).
Contents:
ForewordPhilip Allott
PART I: THE ESSENCE AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY
1. The Relevance of Theory and History: The Essence and Origins of International LawAlexander Orakhelashvili
2. Early-Modern Scholarship on International Law
Alain Wijffels
3. Natural Law and the Law of Nations
Patrick Capps
4. The Origins of Consensual Positivism – Pufendorf, Wolff, and Vattel
Alexander Orakhelashvili
5. The Transformation of International Law in the 19th Century
Amnon Lev
6. Hans Kelsen’s Place in International Legal Theory
Jörg Kammerhofer
7. “The Holiness of the Heart’s Affection”: Philip Allott’s Theory of Social Idealism
Iain Scobbie
PART II: THEMATIC ASPECTS OF THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY
8. International Human Rights Law Theory
Frédéric Mégret
9. Theory of International Criminal Law
Robert Cryer
10. International Law and EU Law: Between Asymmetric Constitutionalisation and FragmentationKatja S Ziegler
11. International Law, International Politics, and Ideology
Alexander Orakhelashvili
PART III: HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
12. Periodization and International Law
William E. Butler
13. Acculturation through the Middle Ages: The Islamic Law of Nations and its Place in the History of International Law
Jean Allain
14. The Classical Law of Nations (1500–1800)
Randall Lesaffer
15. The 19th Century Life of International Law
Alexander Orakhelashvili
16. International Law between Universality and Regional Fragmentation. The Historical Case of Russia
Lauri Mälksoo
17. International Law in the 20th Century
Carlo Focarelli
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