Part I: Origins
1. A Fragile Autonomy: International Law at the Turn of the
Twentieth Century
2. Scepticism and Renewal: International Law in the Inter-bellum
Period
3. The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law
Part II: Cause
4. Presuming Hierarchy: The Problematic Concept of the Legal
Official
5. A Functional Jurisprudence? Methodological Controversies in
Contemporary Legal Theory
6. Law’s ‘Creation Myth’: Instrumental Reasoning and the Necessary
Autonomy of Law
Part III: Effect
7. Domestic Analogy, the Rule of Law and the Relations Between
States
8. Form and Function in the Institutionalisation of International
Law
9. International Law as Governance: An Emerging Legitimacy
Crisis?
Richard Collins is a Lecturer in Law at University College Dublin.
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