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Natural law and international relations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
Extract
There can be no enterprise more important to the student of International Relations than to understand the bearing on his subject of the tradition that asserts the existence of natural law. Natural law played a vital historical role in the emergence of the European states-system: in the period during which the positive law of Christendom was ceasing to command attention, but that of modern international society had not yet taken shape, the idea that princes and peoples were bound by rules in their relations with one another rested substantially, even if by no means exclusively, upon natural law doctrine. The natural law tradition is also central to the critical investigation of normative issues in world politics: for any inquiry into e.g. the justification of force, the obligation of treaties, the rights of sovereignty or the legitimacy of intervention, it provides a rich source of argument.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © British International Studies Association 1979
References
page 172 note 1 Midgly, E. B. F.: The Natural Law Tradition and the Theory of International Relations (Paul Elek, London, 1975)Google Scholar.
page 173 note 1 p. xv.
page 173 note 2 Ibid.
page 173 note 3 p. xvi.
page 173 note 4 Ibid.
page 173 note 5 Ibid,
page 173 note 6 p.xvii.
page 174 note 1 p. xviii.
page 174 note 2 p. xxi
page 175 note 1 p. 2.
page 175 note 2 p. 195.
page 175 note 3 p. 116.
page 175 note 4 p. xv.
page 175 note 5 p. 60.
page 176 note 1 p. 17.
page 177 note 1 p. 24.
page 177 note 2 p. 23.
page 177 note 3 p. 352.
page 177 note 4 Ibid.
page 179 note 1 See Aron, Raymond: Peace and War. A Theory of International Relations (London, 1966) Part IV, pp. 575–787Google Scholar.
page 179 note 2 Midgely, op. cit, p. 9.
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