This paper contributes to the emerging field of comparative international law with a focus on academic international law in Germany, but also with an interest in the methodology of comparison. It uses the concept of social field as the starting point for its inquiry, outlines the different fields that are at play in international law, and then inquires into the operation of these fields, and their interrelations, in the case of Germany. It highlights particular characteristics of German international legal thought, the relatively limited projection of German scholarship into the transnational field of international law, and the peculiar dependence of international law on the broader public law field in Germany. It then inquires into the respective strengths of field-based and alternative approaches for understanding German international law, and concludes by considering the broader promise of placing social fields at the center of the comparative effort.
Monday, January 18, 2016
Krisch: The Many Fields of (German) International Law
Nico Krisch (Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies) has posted The Many Fields of (German) International Law (in Comparative International Law, Anthea Roberts, Paul Stephan, Pierre-Hugues Verdier & Mila Versteeg eds., forthcoming). Here's the abstract: