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International Law as a Belief System
Offers a new perspective on international law and international legal argumentation: to what event is international law a belief system?
Jean d'Aspremont (Author)
9781108421874, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 9 November 2017
176 pages
23.5 x 15.6 x 1.4 cm, 0.39 kg
International Law as a Belief System considers how we construct international legal discourses and the self-referentiality at the centre of all legal arguments about international law. It explores how the fundamental doctrines (such as sources, responsibility, statehood, personality, interpretation and jus cogens) constrain legal reasoning by inventing their own origin and dictating the nature of their functioning. In this innovative work, d'Aspremont argues that these processes constitute the mark of a belief system. This book invites international lawyers to temporarily suspend some of their understandings about the fundamental doctrines they adhere to in their professional activities. It aims to provide readers with new tools to reinvent the thinking about international law and combines theory and practice to offer insights that are valuable for both theorists and practitioners.
1. International law as a belief system
2. The structure of the international belief system
3. Self-referentiality in the international belief system
4. Manifestations of the international belief system
5. The suspension of the international belief system
6. Epilogue.
Subject Areas: Diplomatic law [LBBD], Treaties & other sources of international law [LBBC], International law [LB]