Merchants of Legalism
Since the United Nations finalised its Draft Articles on the Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts in 2001, most of the attention has been on the codification history of the topic. Alan Nissel widens the historic lens to include the pre-United Nations origins, offering the first extensive study on the American contribution to the modern law of state responsibility. The book examines the recurring narrative of lawyers using international law to suit the particular needs of their clients in three key contexts: the US turn to international arbitration practice in the New World, the German theorisation of public law in the setting of its national unification, and the multilateral effort to codify international law within world bodies. This expanded historical framework not only traces the pre-institutional origins of the code, but also highlights the duality of State responsibility doctrines and the political environments from which they emerged.
- Presents an intense study on the history of state responsibility
- Demonstrates the lasting influence of the United States and Latin America on the contemporary international law of investment protection
- Presents a novel argument on the Monroe Doctrine and its impact on international litigation
Product details
December 2024Adobe eBook Reader
9781009378635
0 pages
10 b/w illus.
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1. The responsibilities of States in International law: an overview
- 2. The US turn to the technique of international arbitration
- 3. The creation of State responsibility in the New World
- 4. International responsibility as German philosophy
- 5. State responsibility as World order
- Epilogue: from State responsibility to the responsibility of States
- Bibliography
- Index.