The ever-increasing exchange of goods and ideas among nations,
as well as cross-border pollution, global warming, and
international crime, pose urgent questions for international law.
Here, two respected scholars provide an intellectual framework for
assessing these pressing legal problems from a rational choice
perspective.
The approach assumes that states are rational, forward-looking
agents which use international law to address the actions of other
states that may have consequences for their own citizens, and to
obtain the benefits of international cooperation. It further
assumes that in the absence of a central enforcement agency that
is, a world government international law must be self-enforcing.
States must believe that if they violate international agreements,
other states will retaliate.
Consequently, Eric A. Posner and Alan O. Sykes devote
considerable attention to the challenges of enforcing international
law, which begin with the difficulties of determining what it is.
In the absence of an international constitution, the sources for
international law are vague. Lawyers must rely on statements
contained in all manner of official documents and on simple
observation of states behavior. This looseness leads international
institutions such as the United Nations to deliver conflicting
interpretations of the law s most basic principles. The authors
describe the conditions under which international law succeeds or
fails, across a wide range of issues, including war crimes, human
rights, international criminal law, principles of state
responsibility, law of the sea, international trade regulation, and
international investment law."
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