How to Do Things with International Law

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A01=Ian Hurd
Activism
Adobe
Al-Qaeda
Ambiguity (law)
Amendment
Author_Ian Hurd
Category=JP
Category=JPSL
Category=LB
Category=LBBC
Codification (law)
Coercion
Custom (law)
Declaration of war
Deliberation
Due process
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
Explanation
Foreign policy
Geneva Conventions
Global governance
Governance
Government
Great power
Humanitarian intervention
Ideology
Institution
International Court of Justice
International human rights law
International humanitarian law
International law
International organization
International relations
International relations theory
International security
Law of obligations
Law of war
Legal instrument
Legal personality
Legal positivism
Legalism (Chinese philosophy)
Legality
Legalization
Legitimacy (political)
Legitimation
Martha Finnemore
National security
Non-interventionism
Nuclear weapon
On War
Political science
Political system
Politics
Power politics
Public diplomacy
Public international law
Regulation
Requirement
Result
Rhetoric
Rosa Brooks
Rule of law
Social theory
Sources of international law
Sovereign state
Sovereignty
Statute
Targeted killing
Terrorism
Torture
Treaty
United Nations Convention against Torture
Use of force by states
War
War crime
Westphalian sovereignty

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691196503
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Aug 2019
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A provocative reassessment of the rule of law in world politics

Conventionally understood as a set of limits on state behavior, the “rule of law” in world politics is widely assumed to serve as a progressive contribution to a just, stable, and predictable world. In How to Do Things with International Law, Ian Hurd challenges this received wisdom. Bringing the study of law and legality together with power, politics, and legitimation, he illustrates the complex politics of the international rule of law.

Hurd draws on a series of timely case studies involving recent legal arguments over war, torture, and drones to demonstrate that international law not only domesticates state power but also serves as a permissive and even empowering source of legitimation for state action—including violence and torture. Rather than a civilizing force that holds the promise of universal peace, international law is a deeply politicized set of practices driven by the pursuit of particular interests and desires. The disputes so common in world politics over what law permits and what it forbids are, therefore, fights over the legitimating effect of legality.

A reconsideration of the rule of law in world politics and its relationship to state power, How to Do Things with International Law examines how and why governments use and manipulate international law in foreign policy.

Ian Hurd is associate professor of political science at Northwestern University. He is the author of After Anarchy (Princeton) and International Organizations.

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