Acknowledgements |
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v | |
Introduction |
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1 | (18) |
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I The Institutional Problem: An Explanation |
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5 | (4) |
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II The Limits of Functional Analogy |
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9 | (3) |
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III Overview of the Argument and Structure of the Book |
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12 | (7) |
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1 A Fragile Autonomy: International Law at the Turn of the Twentieth Century |
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19 | (22) |
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I From Philosophy to Legal Science |
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22 | (6) |
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II A Fragile Autonomy: The Sovereignty Problem |
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28 | (8) |
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A Deriving Law from Sovereignty |
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29 | (4) |
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B Avoiding the Charge of Moral Utopianism |
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33 | (3) |
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III `At the Vanishing Point': International Law as Primitive Law |
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36 | (3) |
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39 | (2) |
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2 Scepticism and Renewal: International Law in the Inter-bellum Period |
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41 | (23) |
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I The Call for Relevance: Hans Morgenthau and the Realist Turn |
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45 | (5) |
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II Kelsen and the Neo-positivist Revival |
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50 | (3) |
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III A Middle Way? Lauterpacht, Brierly and the Renaissance of Natural Law |
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53 | (10) |
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63 | (1) |
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3 The Institutional Problem in Modern International Law |
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64 | (41) |
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I Explaining the Autonomy of International Law |
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68 | (6) |
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II International Law as a Legal System: The Problem of Structural Indeterminacy |
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74 | (3) |
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III HLA Hart and the `Constitutional Deficiency' of International Law |
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77 | (7) |
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A The Rule of Recognition and the Practices of Officials |
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78 | (3) |
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B The Functional Presumptions of Hart's Concept of Law |
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81 | (3) |
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IV An International `Rule of Recognition'? Indeterminacy in the Sources of International Law |
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84 | (15) |
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A Customary International Law and the Opinio Juris Paradox |
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87 | (6) |
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B The Institutional Problem in Customary Law Ascertainment |
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93 | (6) |
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99 | (6) |
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4 Presuming Hierarchy: The Problematic Concept of the Legal Official |
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105 | (23) |
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I Officialdom and the Identity of Legal Orders |
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107 | (3) |
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II The Problematic Concept of the Legal Official |
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110 | (5) |
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III Functional Officialdom and the Problem of Translation |
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115 | (6) |
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IV Moving Beyond the State: A Way Forward for Conceptual Enquiry? |
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121 | (5) |
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V Conclusion: Presuming the Law-State? |
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126 | (2) |
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5 A Functional Jurisprudence? Methodological Controversies in Contemporary Legal Theory |
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128 | (22) |
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I Methodological Controversy in Legal Theory |
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130 | (3) |
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II The Problem of Value Neutrality in Conceptual Analysis |
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133 | (6) |
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III From the Concept to the Rule of Law? In Search of Law's `Focal Meaning' |
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139 | (3) |
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IV The Practical Viewpoint and the Necessary Autonomy of Law |
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142 | (6) |
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148 | (2) |
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6 Law's `Creation Myth': Instrumental Reasoning and the Necessary Autonomy of Law |
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150 | (25) |
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I Law's `Creation Myth': The Autonomy Thesis |
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154 | (5) |
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II The Failure of the Autonomy Thesis |
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159 | (3) |
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III Rescuing the Autonomy Thesis} |
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162 | (9) |
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A On the Reflexivity of Legal Reasoning |
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163 | (3) |
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B Morality `All the Way Down'? The Failure of the Interpretivist Challenge |
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166 | (4) |
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C The Autonomy Thesis as a Social Contract Theory |
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170 | (1) |
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171 | (4) |
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7 Domestic Analogy, the Rule of Law and the Relations Between States |
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175 | (20) |
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I Domestic Analogy and the Discontinuity Thesis |
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179 | (5) |
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II An International Rule of Law? |
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184 | (5) |
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III The Rule of Law as the Basis of Association in International Relations: On the Specific Character of International Law |
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189 | (4) |
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193 | (2) |
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8 Form and Function in the Institutionalisation of International Law |
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195 | (27) |
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I Form and Function in the Institutionalisation of International Law |
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198 | (8) |
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II The Impact of Institutionalisation: Straining the System |
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206 | (7) |
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III On the Complex Character of International Institutions |
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213 | (8) |
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221 | (1) |
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9 International Law as Governance: An Emerging Legitimacy Crisis? |
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222 | (30) |
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I Postmodern Anxieties: The Deformalisation and Fragmentation of International Law |
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225 | (9) |
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II International Law as `Governance'? |
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234 | (6) |
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III Re-inventing the Institutional Problem: International Law as Public Law? |
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240 | (10) |
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250 | (2) |
Conclusion |
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252 | (4) |
Bibliography |
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256 | (27) |
Index |
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283 | |