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Publications and other Resources >>
New Publications
Great Powers and Outlaw States - Unequal Sovereigns
in the International Legal Order
Gerry Simpson
London School of Economics and Political Science
2004
0521827612 Hardback
Published by: Cambridge University Press
Synopsis:
The presence of Great Powers and outlaw states is a central
but under-explored feature of international society. In this
book, Gerry Simpson describes the ways in which an international
legal order based on ‘sovereign equality’ has accommodated
the Great Powers and regulated outlaw states since the beginning
of the nineteenth-century. In doing so, the author offers
a fresh understanding of sovereignty which he terms juridical
sovereignty to show how international law has managed the
interplay of three languages: the languages of Great Power
prerogative, the language of outlawry (or anti-pluralism)
and the language of sovereign equality. The co-existence and
interaction of these three languages is traced through a number
of moments of institutional transformation in the global order
from the Congress of Vienna to the ‘war on terrorism’.
Contents:
Foreword Professor James Crawford; Preface; Acknowledgements;
Part I. Introduction: 1. Great powers and outlaw states; Part
II. Concepts: 2. Sovereign equalities; 3. Legalised hierarchies;
Part III. Histories: Great Powers: 4. Legalised hegemony:
Vienna to The Hague 1815–1906; 5. ‘Extreme equality’: rupture
at The Hague 1907; 6. The great powers, sovereign equality
and the making of the UN charter: San Francisco 1945; 7. Holy
alliances: Verona 1818 and Kosovo 1999; Part IV. Histories:
Outlaw States: 8. Unequal sovereigns 1815–1839; 9. Peace-loving
nations: 1945; 10. Outlaw states: 1999; Part V. Conclusion:
11. Arguing about Afghanistan: great powers and outlaw states
redux; 12. The puzzle of sovereignty.
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