Part I: Law, Politics and the Sovereign State 1: Introduction: What is International Law and Why Does it Matter for International Relations? 2: International Law and International Relations Theory 3: Locating Law in the International System 4: International Organisations, States and Global Governance 5: Compliance and Enforcement in International LawPart II: Controversies in Contemporary International Law and Politics 6: Global Environmental Governance and Climate Change 7: Global Economic and Trade Governance 8: Human Rights in the Post-War Period 9: States, Nations, and Colonies: The Law and Politics of Self-Determination 10: International Law and the Use of Force 11: International Humanitarian Law 12: War and Law in the Twenty-First Century: New Threats and New Approaches 13: International Criminal Justice: From Nuremberg to the International Criminal Court 14: The Politics of International Law: Continuity and Change
Professor Scicluna's book, The Politics of International Law, is a
unique textbook that I plan to use myself. The examples and boxes
are extremely up to date, and it is the only international law
textbook that situates international legal politics in its
post-colonial context, bringing in a TWAIL (Third World
Perspectives on International Law) voice. Very readable, and deftly
switching between international relations theory and international
law, law on the books and law in action, Western and non-Western
perspectives, this text offers up to date discussions that will
engage students as they grapple with the hard issues and conundrums
that international law today raises.
*Karen J. Alter, Professor of Political Science and Law,
Northwestern University, USA*
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