Morality and responsibility of rulers : European and Chinese origins of a rule of law as justice for world order / edited by Anthony Carty and Janne E. Nijman.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780199670055
- K3171 MOR
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Main Library Open Shelf | K3171 MOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 160275 | Available | BK148386 |
Includes index
Anthony Carty and Janne Nijman: Introduction: The Moral Responsibility of Rulers: Going Back Beyond the Liberal 'Rule of Law' for World OrderPart I: Law and Justice in Early Modern European Thought on World Order1: Joseph Canning: The Universal Rule of Law in the Thought of the Late Medieval Jurists of Roman and Canon Law2: Susan Longfield Karr: 'The Law of Nations is Common to all Mankind': Jus gentium in Humanist Jurisprudence3: Andrew RC Simpson: 'Cleare as is the Summers Sunne'? Scottish Perspectives on Legal Learning, Parliamentary Power and the English Royal Succession4: Xavier Tubau: Humanism, the Bible, and Erasmus' Moral World Order5: Anthony Pagden: Legislating for the 'Whole World that is, in a Sense, a Commonwealth': Conquest, Occupation, and the Obligation to 'Defend the Innocent'6: Anthony Carty: Cardinal Richelieu between Vattel and Machiavelli7: John Witte Jr.: The Universal Rule of Natural Law and Written Constitutions in the Thought of Johannes Althusius8: Christoph Stumpf: Hugo Grotius and the Universal Rule of Law9: Peter Goodrich: Aquatopia: Lines of Amity and Laws of the Sea10: Janne Nijman: A Universal Rule of Law for a Pluralist World Order: Leibniz's Universal Jurisprudence and his Praise of the Chinese RulerPart II: Law and Justice in Chinese Thought on World Order11: Aihe Wang: Moral Rulership and World Order in Ancient Chinese Cosmology12: Chun-chieh Huang: 'Humane Governance' as the Moral Responsibility of Rulers in East Asian Confucian Political Philosophy13: Hu Henan: Bridging the Western and Eastern Traditions: A Comparative Study of the Legal Thoughts of Hugo Grotius and Lao Zi14: Emily Cheung and Maranatha Fung: The Hazards of Translating Wheaton's 'Elements of International Law' into Chinese: Cultures of World Order Lost in Translation15: Tian Tao: Chinese Intellectuals' Discourse of International Law in the Late 19th Century and Early 20th Century16: Patrick Sze-lok Leung and Anthony Carty: The Crisis of the Ryukyus 1877-1882: Confucian World Order Challenged and Defeated by Western/Japanese Imperial International Law17: Anna Baka and Lucy QI: Lost in Translation in the Sino-French War in Vietnam: From Western International Law to Confucian Legal Semantics: A Comparative-Critical Analysis of Chinese, French, and American Archives18: Patrick Sze-Lok Keung and Bijun Xu: The Sino-Japanese War and the Collapse of the Qing and Confucian World Order in the Face of Japanese Imperialism and European Acquiescence19: Jing Tan and Anthony Carty: Confucianism and Western International Law in 1900: Li Hongzhang and Sir Ernest Satow Compared: The Case Study of the Crisis of Russia in Manchuria 1900-1
Arguing that the concept of an 'international rule of law' has a history independent from that of the national rule of law, this book discusses early modern European thought on natural law and justice and Chinese thought on world order and international law. It provides a unique examination of comparative international legal history and philosophy
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