from Part I - The foundations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
There is a certain irony in the mutual antipathy displayed by the disciplines of International Relations (IR) and International Law (IL). For as it happens, both disciplines are (and have been) united by common theoretical divisions. That is to say, the dominant paradigms in both disciplines are similar in their core ontological assumptions about the world; the main challengers in each discipline also share remarkably similar worldviews. The dominance of realism in IR is matched by the dominance of positivism in IL. Both realism and positivism offer structural approaches to their subject that prioritise the role of states and instrumental action, and downplay the significance of domestic politics, norms and ethics. Just as liberal institutionalism developed to challenge the dominance of realism in IR from the 1950s onwards, so legal positivism was challenged by the emerging legal process school from the 1940s onwards. These liberal challengers offer agent-centric approaches that highlight a plurality of actors in addition to states, as well as the role of domestic processes, normative action and ethical considerations in world politics.
As we noted in the Introduction, there is growing appreciation among some IR and IL scholars that there is much to learn from each other's discipline. But this appreciation is confined to liberal scholars in IR and IL; realists still have little time for law, and legal positivists still consider politics and policy to be none of their concern. To be sure, liberalism should be naturally inclined to take law seriously, given its focus on norms, regimes and institutions. Equally, the legal process school explicitly seeks to situate the law in broader socio-political contexts. At the same time, given realism's and legal positivism's shared worldviews, an engagement between these two disciplinary giants is long overdue.
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