|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewThis book is based on Professor Franck's highly acclaimed Hague Academy General Course. In it he offers a compelling view of the future of international legal reasoning and legal theory. The author offers a critical analysis of the prescriptive norms and institutions of modern international law and argues that international law has the capacity to advance, in practice, the abstract social values shared by the community of states and persons. This book is both thought-provoking and original and as such is essential reading for students of international law and legal theory. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Thomas M. FranckPublisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Clarendon Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.768kg ISBN: 9780198267850ISBN 10: 0198267851 Pages: 536 Publication Date: 29 January 1998 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPART I: A CRITICAL ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK FOR A CRITIQUE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW ; 1. Fairness and International Law: An Analytical Framework ; 2. Legitimacy and Fairness ; 3. Equity as Fairness ; PART II: FAIRNESS IN EMPOWERMENT OF PERSONS AND PEOPLES ; 4. Fairness to Persons: The Democratic Entitlement ; 5. Fairness to Peoples and their Right to Self-Determination ; PART III: FAIRNESS AND INSTITUTIONAL POWER ; 6. Administrative Impartiality as Fairness: The UN Secretary-General Good Offices and Other Third Party Functions ; 7. The Bona Fides of Power: Security Control and Threats to the Peace ; 8. Just and Unjust War ; 9. Collective Security: Sharing Responsibility and Burdens ; 10. Judicial Fairness: The International Court of Justice ; PART IV: THE LAW AND INSTITUTIONS OF DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE ; 11. Law, Moral Philosophy and Economics in Environmental Discourse ; 12. Some Instances of Fairness in Establishing Environmental Normative Systems ; 13. Economic Fairness: Terms of Development and Trade ; 14. Fairness in International Investment Law ; PART V: FAIRNESS ABOUT FAIRNESS: SHAPING A GLOBAL DISCOURSE ; 15. Forums of FairnessReviewsan original and groundbreaking source of international legal scholarship...This thorough, scholarly treatise is bound to become a standard...Highly recommended for graduate students and faculty. Choice this work provides a vision for the future development of international law and institutions and ends with a challenge to both scholars and practitioners to take up the issue of fairness in the law actively. International Affairs ...a work of considerable scholarship and vitality...Franck is challenging us to develop a new way of thinking about international law. I will have to read this book a second time, perhaps a third, to take in all that Franck offers, but that will be a pleasure not a burden. The Cambridge Law Journal `Professor Franck has a clear view of current developments and has understood the contemporary need for strong guidelines and grand aspirations.' International Labour Review Professor Franck has a powerful intellect and a total command of the broad scope of international law./ The author sets out a bold vision of what international law is and what it can become./ ... the book is a scholarly 'tour de force', essential reading for anyone interested in international law./ Thomas Schoenbaum, Cambridge Law Journal, 1999. `This ambitious work begins with the premise that international law no longer has to defend its existence but can now make substantive progress...This the author does rather comprehensively.' Foreign Affairs `an original and groundbreaking source of international legal scholarship...This thorough, scholarly treatise iis bound to become a standard...Highly recommended for graduate students and faculty.' Choice `Although the book deals primarily with international law, the underlying theory is valid for all legal systems. It is unique in its combination of theory and practice...Professor Thomas Franck has written a masterpiece, a modern classic of international law.' EJIL 1997 `What is unusual is his thoughtful discussion of the great, indeed ultimate question, brought uncomfortably to the fore by Libya's persistence in defence of its sovereign rights.' London Review of Books `this work provides a vision for the future development of international law and institutions and ends with a challenge to both scholars and practitioners to take up the issue of fairess in the law actively.' International Affairs `...a work of considerable scholarship and vitality...Franck is challenging us to develop a new way of thinking about international law. I will have to read this book a second time, perhaps a third, to take in all that Franck offers, but that will be a pleasure not a burden.' The Cambridge Law Journal `'formidably learned and wide-ranging book...the most important thing to say about this book, quite apart from acknowledging Franck's theoretical sophistication and technical virtuosity, is that it moves international legal scholarship on to exactly the right terrain. It deserves the large readership it will no doubt achieve.'' The Edinburgh Law Review ` ...a challenging contribution to the critical analysis of international law...It is a gigantic task, one which is led with such gusto that the reading is captivating and the argument compelling in many respects...a courageous attempt to address what are usually unaddressed issues in international law. The book realizes an interesting mix of law and politics. ' Elizabeth Zoller, Virginia Journal of International Law, vol 36. ` ...grand new book...provides a grand review of major international institutions...Professor Franck's book is a refreshing new direction in international law scholarship...Professor Franck has helped us embark upon an ambitious, but necessary, examination of the legitimacy and justice of our course. ' Philip Trimble, International Law , May 1997. an original and groundbreaking source of international legal scholarship...This thorough, scholarly treatise is bound to become a standard...Highly recommended for graduate students and faculty. Choice this work provides a vision for the future development of international law and institutions and ends with a challenge to both scholars and practitioners to take up the issue of fairness in the law actively. International Affairs ...a work of considerable scholarship and vitality...Franck is challenging us to develop a new way of thinking about international law. I will have to read this book a second time, perhaps a third, to take in all that Franck offers, but that will be a pleasure not a burden. The Cambridge Law Journal Author InformationProfessor Thomas M. Franck is the Murry and Ida Becker Professor of Law and Director of the Centre for International Studies at New York University Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |