基本説明
Covers such topics as the nature of legal argument, the negotiation and implementation of multilateral treaties, and the place of the United Nations.
Full Description
Terrorist attacks. UN sanctions. The creation of the International Criminal Court. The war on Iraq. In each of these headline events, the complex relationship of international law and world politics comes into play. This volume introduces the concepts, the rules and the functioning of international law in a way that is accessible to students of political science. Scott covers such core topics as the nature of legal argument, the negotiation and implementation of multilateral treaties, and the place of the United Nations, other intergovernmental organizations, and non-state actors in the international legal system. Equally important, she connects the actual content of laws dealing with, for example, human rights, the use of force, the environment and genocide to current issues and problems. Case studies within the chapters bring the real world of world politics to life. Covering the full range of this subfield of international relations, this text explains the role that international law plays in the changing arena of world politics.
Contents
International Law and World Politics Entwined; States in International Law; Intergovernmental Organizations in International Law; Non-state Actors in International Law; The Logical Structure of International Law; Legal Argument as Political Manoeuvreing; Reading a Multilateral Treaty; The Evolution of a Multilateral Treaty Regime; International Law and Arms Control; International Human Rights Law; International Humanitarian Law; International Law and the Environment; The Future Role of International Law in World Politics.