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States undermining international law : the League of Nations, United Nations, and failed utopianism / Deepak Mawar

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  • States undermining international law : the League of Nations, United Nations, and failed utopianism / Deepak Mawar
  • Cham : Palgrave Macmillan
  • C 2021
  • 1 vol. (XV-235 p.) ; 22 cm
  • Philosophy, public policy, and transnational law
  • 978-3-030-64788-9
  • 3-030-64788-9
  • 978-3-030-64791-9
  • 9783030647919 br.
  • Philosophy, public policy, and transnational law John Martin Gillroy Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2013- vol.
  • 341.2
  • Notes bibliogr.
  • 1.Chapter 1: States Undermining International Law- An Introduction, 2 Chapter 2: Emancipatory Idealism: A Utopian Focal Goal of International Law, 3 Chapter 3: States and Utopian Goals of International Law, 4 Chapter 4:The Life and Death of the League of Nations, 5 Chapter 5: The United Nations Security Council and Power Politics 6.Chapter 6: Conclusion: Utopianism and State Primacy in International Law
  • Texte remanié de Doctoral thesis Political science King's College London 2019
  • "This book analyses the history of international law to reveal the significant role utopianism has played in developing the international legal system. In fact, when pinpointing the legal system's most accelerated phases of development, it becomes increasingly apparent how integral utopianism has been in dealing with the international community's most troubled periods such as the World Wars. However, States have on numerous occasions undermined utopianism, leading to situations where individuals and communities have been vulnerable to modes of oppression such as war or repressive regimes. Thus, by examining the League of Nations and United Nations, this book seeks to show why utopianism continues to be a vital ingredient when the international community is seeking to ensure its loftiest and most ambitious goals such as maintaining international peace and security, and why for the sake of such utopian aspirations, the primary position States enjoy in international law requires reassessment." (4e de couv.)
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