Anthony Carty offers an internal critique of the discipline of
international law whilst showing the necessary place for philosophy
within this subject area. By reintroducing philosophy into the
heart of the study of international law, he explains how
traditional philosophy has always been an integral part of the
discipline. However, this has been driven out by legal positivism,
which has, in turn, become a pure technique of law. He explores the
extent of the disintegration and confusion in the discipline and
offers various ways of renewing philosophical practice.By covering
a range of approaches - post-structuralism, neo-Marxist
geopolitics, social-democratic constitutional theory and
existential phenomenology - this book will encourage you to think
afresh about how far to bring order to, or find order in,
contemporary international society.
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