Book contents
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- Frontispiece
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Scope, Scale and Humility in the History of International Law
- Part I The Historiography of International Law
- Part II The Historiography of International Law
- 6 The Historiography of International Law in East Asia
- 7 The Historiography of International Law in Sub-Saharan Africa
- 8 Historiography of International Law on the European Continent
- 9 The Historiography of International Law in Russia and Its Successor States
- 10 ‘The Most Neglected Province’
- 11 The View from the US Leviathan
- 12 Using History in Latin America
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
- References
10 - ‘The Most Neglected Province’
British Historiography of International Law
from Part II - The Historiography of International Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2024
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- Frontispiece
- The Cambridge History of International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Scope, Scale and Humility in the History of International Law
- Part I The Historiography of International Law
- Part II The Historiography of International Law
- 6 The Historiography of International Law in East Asia
- 7 The Historiography of International Law in Sub-Saharan Africa
- 8 Historiography of International Law on the European Continent
- 9 The Historiography of International Law in Russia and Its Successor States
- 10 ‘The Most Neglected Province’
- 11 The View from the US Leviathan
- 12 Using History in Latin America
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
- References
Summary
This chapter periodises the British historiography of international law in five parts. Its first period extends from Robert Ward’s Enquiry into the Foundation and History of the Law of Nations in Europe (1795) to Thomas Erskine Holland’s Oxford inaugural lecture on Alberico Gentili (1874), and traces the gradual professionalisation of the discipline and its historical strain. The second part examines the entanglement of empire and historicism in British international legal historiography from around 1870 to roughly 1920. The third part treats the symbolic coming of age of British international legal historiography, between the founding of the British Yearbook of International Law in 1920, and Hersch Lauterpacht’s pivotal enunciation of the so-called ‘Grotian’ tradition of international law after the Second World War. The fourth part explores the history of international law in the succeeding ‘age of Lauterpacht’ up to c. 1960, when historiographical advances came increasingly from the semi-periphery rather than the centre and from disciplines other than international law. The fifth part takes stock of the transdisciplinary ‘turn’ to the history of international law in the British world and the chapter concludes with reflections on the nascent field of comparative international legal history in the light of British developments over the longue durée.
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- The Cambridge History of International Law , pp. 293 - 329Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024