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The Law of Strangers: Jewish Lawyers and International Law in the Twentieth Century (eBook)


ISBN13: 9781316998403
Published: July 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: eBook (ePub)
Price: £23.99
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From the Nuremberg Trials to contemporary human rights, Jews have long played prominent roles in the making of international law. But the actual ties between Jewish heritage and legal thought remain a subject of mystery and conjecture even among specialists.

This volume of biographical studies takes a unique interdisciplinary approach, pairing historians and legal scholars to explore how their Jewish identities and experiences shaped their legal thought and activism. Using newly-discovered sources and sophisticated interpretative methods, this book offers an alternative history of twentieth-century international legal profession – and a new model to the emerging field of international legal biography.

  • Will present engaging biographical case studies that expand knowledge of key historical figures while contributing to larger questions about Jews and law
  • Will engage legal specialists, historians, and other scholars interested in the questions of religion, ethnicity, politics, and international law.
  • Illuminates the state of the field, and the emerging new directions in legal history, international law, and society studies.

Subjects:
Public International Law, Legal History, eBooks
Contents:
1. Introduction: The Law of Strangers James Loeffler and Moria Paz
Part I: Hersch Zvi Lauterpacht
2. The “Natural Right of the Jewish People”: Zionism, International Law, and the Paradox of Hersch Lauterpacht James Loeffler
3. A Closet Positivist: Lauterpacht between Law and Diplomacy Martti Koskeniemmi
Part II: Hans Kelsen
4. Assimilation through Law: Hans Kelsen and the Jewish Experience Eliav Lieblich
5. Philosophy beyond Historicism: Reflections on Hans Kelsen and the Jewish Experience Leora Batnitzky
Part III: Louis Henkin
6. Louis Henkin, Human Rights, and American-Jewish Constitutional Patriotism, Samuel Moyn
7. Louis Henkin and the Genealogy of Jewish/American Liberalism William Forbath
Part IV: Egon Schwelb
8. Egon Schwelb and the Human Rights Legal Activism within Borders Mira Siegelberg
9. “Emotional Restraint” as Legalist Internationalism: Egon Schwelb's Liberalism after the Fall Umut Özsu
Part V: René Cassin
10. A Most Inglorious Right: René Cassin, Freedom of Movement, Jews and Palestinians Moria Paz
11. There's No Place Like Home: Domicile, René Cassin, and the Aporias of Modern International Law Nathaniel Berman Part VI: Shabtai Rosenne
12. Shabtai Rosenne: The Transformation of Sefton Rowson Rotem Giladi
13. Shabtai Rosenne: A Personal Aspect Philippe Sands
Part VII: Julius Stone
14. Enablement and Constraint: Julius Stone and the Contradictions of the Sociological Path to International Law Jacqueline Mowbray
15. An Axionormative Dissenter: Reflections on Julius Stone David N. Myers
Index.