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The Invention of Custom: Natural Law and the Law of Nations, ca. 1550-1750: The History and Theory of International Law

Autor Francesca Iurlaro
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 dec 2021
The concept of customary international law, although differently formulated, is already present in early modern European debates on natural law and the law of nations. However, no scholarly monograph has, until now, addressed the relationship between custom and the European natural law and ius gentium tradition. This book tells that neglected story, and offers a solid conceptual framework to contextualize and understand the 'problematic of custom', namely how to identify its normative content. Natural law doctrines, and the different ways in which they help construct human reason, provided custom with such normative content. This normative content consists of a set of fundamental moral values that help identify the status of custom as either a fundamental feature or an original source of ius gentium. This book explores what cultural values and practices facilitated the emergence of custom and rendered it into as a source of the law of nations, and how they did so. Two crucial issues form the core of the book's analysis. Firstly, it qualifies the nature of the interrelation between natural law and ius gentium, explaining why it matters in relation to our understanding of the idea of custom. Second, the book claims that the process of custom formation as a source of law calls into question the role of the authority of history. The interpretation of the past through this approach can thus be described as one of 'invention'.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780192897954
ISBN-10: 0192897950
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 160 x 240 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria The History and Theory of International Law

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

Francesca Iurlaro's book is the result of a bold fresh reading of some of the most notorious early-modern writers on the law of nations. The author also dialogues with an impressive number of recent scholarly studies which have been produced on the early-modern law of nations, and it will no doubt foster new debates on the use of authorities and historical arguments in early-modern legal works, and on the normative structure of early-modern natural law and ius gentium.

Notă biografică

Francesca Iurlaro is a Senior Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law. She holds a PhD in Law from the European University Institute in Florence (2018). She graduated in the history of philosphy (University of Macerata, 2014) and has an LLM in Comparative, European and International Laws (European University Institute, 2015). She was a Global Postdoctoral Fellow at NYU School of Law (2019-2020).Her research interests include international legal thought, history of political thought, history and reception of natural law theories, law and literature, food ethics, and animal rights. In 2012 she was awarded the Alberico Gentili Prize for her Italian translation of and introduction to Alberico Gentili's Lectionis Virgilianae Variae Liber ad Robertum filium, a less-known commentary of Virgil's Eclogues published by the famous Italian jurist in 1603.