The generation of American international lawyers who founded the American Society of International Law in 1906 and nurtured the soil for what has been retrospectively called a 'moralistic-legalistic approach to international relations' remains little studied. A survey of the rise of international legal literature in the United States from the midnineteenth century to the eve of the Great War serves as a backdrop to the examination of the boosting effect on international law of the Spanish American War in 1898. An examination of the Insular Cases before the US Supreme Court is then accompanied by the analysis of a number of influential factors behind the pre-war rise of international law in the United States. The work concludes with an examination of the rise of natural law doctrines in international law during the interwar period and the critiques addressed by the realist founders of the field of 'international relations' to the 'moralistic-legalistic approach to international relations'.
Monday, November 10, 2014
de la Rasilla del Moral: The Ambivalent Shadow of the Pre-Wilsonian Rise of International Law
Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral (Brunel Univ. – Law) has posted The Ambivalent Shadow of the Pre-Wilsonian Rise of International Law (Erasmus Law Review, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2014). Here’s the abstract: