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Theory of International Organizations in Public International Law [Hardback]

(University of Cambridge)
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International organizations remain relative strangers from the perspective of international legal theory. Drawing insights from philosophical discourse, this book moves away from popular binary divisions surrounding the study of international organizations, and focuses instead on what international law recognizes as 'public' authority.

Greater, lesser, or just different than the sum of their parts? For all their prominence in global affairs, international organizations remain relative strangers from the perspective of international legal theory. Drawing insights from philosophical discourse, this book moves past binary models that would have international organizations either be nothing over and above their members or simply analogous to them. Rather than compare international organizations and their members, Chasapis Tassinis asks us to understand them both as manifestations of communal organization and what international law recognizes as 'public' authority. Theorizing international organizations as only a branch within a broader family of corporate entities, this book allows us to untangle old doctrinal puzzles. These include the extent to which international organizations are bound by customary international law and can contribute to its formation, or whether they enjoy a legal personality that is opposable to members and non-members alike.

Papildus informācija

Rethinks international organizations as corporate entities in public international law, going beyond existing theories.
Introduction;
2. The problem of situating international organizations in
relation to States as species of legal actors;
3. The problem of analytically
distinguishing international organizations from their members;
4. Common
assumptions about the State when theorizing international organizations;
5.
Looking for 'Real' Entities: insights from philosophical discourse;
6.
Corporate existence as a problem of starting assumptions about members'
existence;
7. Institutional genealogy as the foundation for theorizing
international organizations;
8. International organizations as institutions
distinct from their members;
9. International organizations and customary
international law; Conclusion; Bibliography.
Orfeas Chasapis Tassinis is a Research Fellow at Gonville and Caius College and an Affiliate Lecturer at the University of Cambridge where he teaches public international law at the Faculty of Law.