格式化内容附注: | Essential elements :introduction -- Thoughts on the impact of theory on international law -- Important elements in the making of theory -- Adumbrations of the theoretical adventure -- Traceability of antecedents to current scholarship -- Regional and national traditions -- Self-referential international law and the compelling need to also listen to other's voices -- Concluding remarks -- Enduring and new schools, movements and trends : introduction -- Basic orientations -- Other approaches -- Universal, plural, relative -- Further explorations -- Sociological aspects of international law theories -- Concluding remarks 261 -- Where is the international community or society? -- Ontological and post-ontological discourses -- General (or grand) theories of international law and general international law -- Legal basis of international obligations -- Legitimacy -- Compliance -- Unity and universality -- Fragmentation -- The issue of jurisdiction and competence -- Fictions: international law possibly contains the most ficticious norms than any other legal system -- Hegemonic power and unilateralism -- The international dimension of the rule of law -- Normativity forming an integral part of international law -- Concluding remarks -- The "users" of international law : moving beyond doctrinal controversies on "subjects", non-state actors" and "participants" -- The state -- International organizations -- "Individuals" and other private persons -- Law-making -- Expanding the products and modes of fabrication -- Relationship between norms -- Interpretation -- Concluding remarks -- Interrogations and expectations -- A skeleton meeting of minds -- Concluding remarks -- Final conclusions : the choristers' performances. |