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Intro
Preface
Acknowledgements
Contents
About the Author
Acronyms
Table of case law
Table of Legislation
Table of Treaties and International Instruments
1 Introduction
1 International Law and Political Science
2 International Law in Explanatory Schemes for Social Action
Notes
2 The State of the Art
1 The Storyline of International Law and Politics
1.1 The Emergence of Positivism
1.2 The Enduring Legacy of Realism
1.3 The Behavioural Revolution
1.4 The English School
1.5 The New Haven School
1.6 How Nations Behave

1.7 Critical Legal Studies
1.8 Regime Theory
1.9 Institutionalism
1.10 Constructivism
1.11 The Power of Legitimacy
1.12 The Ethics of Human Rights
1.13 International Legal Process
1.14 Enforcement Theory
1.15 Transnational Legal Process
1.16 Liberal Theory
1.17 Feminist International Law and International Relations Theory
1.18 Transcivilisational Perspectives on International Law
2 How is International Law Relevant?
2.1 The Realist View
2.2 Institutionalism and The Economic Analysis of Law
2.3 Fairness and Legitimacy in the International System

2.4 Constructivism in International Law
3 Why and How Norms and Interest Matter
Notes
3 The Role of Law in International Relations
1 Methodology
1.1 Communicative Action and Rationality
1.2 Experimental, Quantitative, and Qualitative-Empirical Approaches in Social Science
2 Different Conceptions of Law in the International System
2.1 International Law as Restraint
2.2 International Law as Framework for Communicative Action
2.2.1 International Law as Instrument for Justification
2.2.2 Intersubjective Understandings in International Law

2.2.3 International Law and Communicative Action
3 Anarchy and Power Asymmetry in International Law
3.1 Communicative Action and the Logics of Anarchy
3.1.1 The "Anarchy Problématique" and the "Common Lifeworld"
3.1.2 Three Logics of Social Interaction
3.1.3 Hobbes and the State of Permanent Conflict
3.1.4 Locke and the Logic of Rivalry
3.1.5 Kant and the Logic of Friendship
3.1.6 The Common Lifeworld and Logics of Interaction
3.2 International Law and Power Asymmetries
3.2.1 Ideal Speech Situations and Power Asymmetries

3.2.2 External Legal Policy and Power Relations
3.2.3 International Law as Instrument of Power
3.2.4 Withdrawal from International Law
3.2.5 Reshaping International Law
3.2.6 Extraterritorial Application of Domestic Law
3.2.7 Power Politics and the Paradox of Hegemony
Notes
4 International Law and the Use of Force
1 Bringing Force Under International Law
1.1 The Rise and Fall of the League of Nations
1.2 Restraining Force Under the UN Charter
2 Self-Defence
2.1 Self-Defence in International Law
2.2 Pre-emptive Self-Defence?

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