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Philosophy of International Law (LAWS70429)
Graduate coursework level 7Points: 12.5Not available in 2025
About this subject
Overview
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The philosophy of international law has recently emerged as an exciting area of jurisprudential inquiry. This subject will explore the moral and political values that provide a basis for the critical appraisal of international law and institutions. It begins with a study of the legitimacy of international law: its claim to be binding on its subjects. Does legitimacy require consent, democracy or something else? This will lead to an investigation of the ideas of state sovereignty, communal self-determination and, in particular, human rights, as factors bearing on international law’s legitimacy. The final section of the subject considers the implications for the critical evaluation of specific areas of international law, beginning with the doctrine of its sources. The selection of the other two or three areas to be discussed (eg international economic law, international environmental law, humanitarian intervention, international criminal law etc.) will be determined by class vote.
Principal topics include:
- The legitimacy of international law (in particular, consent, democracy and service conceptions of legitimacy)
- The value and limits of state sovereignty (and the compatibility of sovereignty with the legitimacy of international law)
- The basis of communal self-determination (whether in the value of a shared communal identity or shared occupancy of a given territory)
- The nature and justification of human rights (in particular, the conflict between ‘orthodox’ and ‘political’ conceptions of human rights, and the debate about the foundations of human rights, and whether human rights are merely parochial ‘Western’ constructs)
- The theory of the sources of international law, esp. the debate between positivist and non-positive accounts of customary international law, the idea that new customary law can be made by violating existing customary law, the doctrine of jus cogens
- Selected topics arising in at least two of the following areas of international law: international economic law, international environmental law, humanitarian intervention, international criminal law and laws of war.
Intended learning outcomes
A student who has successfully completed this subject will:
- Have developed a critical grasp of some of the key conceptual and normative questions that underlie international law and the various approaches to them advocated by leading theorists
- Have developed their own critical, reflective answers to at least some of these questions; in particular, they will have:
- An understanding of the problem of the ‘legitimacy’ of international law and of the various responses to it in the literature
- Assessed the coherence and value of the idea of state sovereignty, and how it can be squared with the bindingness of international law
- A critical understanding of the principle of communal self-determination, including whether it is best seen as based on considerations of identity or occupancy of a common territory
- A critical appreciation of the questions surrounding the nature of human rights (including whether they are essentially political norms, concerned with state legitimacy or regulating international intervention) and their grounds (including whether they have a special connection with the value of freedom and whether they can be defended against the charge of Western parochialism)
- Assessed rival accounts of the sources of international law, especially customary international law, in the light of an adequate theory of legitimacy, and ethical issues surrounding the idea that new customary law can be made by violating existing customary law
- A critical appreciation of some key conceptual and normative questions arising in selected areas of international law, e.g. international economic law, interventional environmental law, humanitarian intervention, international criminal law.
Last updated: 8 November 2024