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Ethics and Authority in International Law

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Ethics and Authority in International Law Synopsis

The specialized vocabularies of lawyers, ethicists, and political scientists obscure the roots of many real disagreements. In this book, the distinguished American international lawyer Alfred Rubin provides a penetrating account of where these roots lie, and argues powerfully that disagreements which have existed for 3,000 years are unlikely to be resolved soon. Attempts to make 'war crimes' or 'terrorism' criminal under international law seem doomed to fail for the same reasons that attempts failed in the early nineteenth century to make piracy, war crimes, and the international traffic in slaves criminal under the law of nations. And for the same reasons, Professor Rubin argues, it is unlikely that an international criminal court can be instituted today to enforce ethicists' versions of 'international law'.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521046114
Publication date:
Author: Alfred P Tufts University, Massachusetts Rubin
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 256 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
Genres: International law