PART I INTERNATIONAL LAW IN GENERAL 3
Ⅰ INTERNATIONAL LAW AS LAW 3
1 The nature of international law and general jurisprudence 3
2 The reality of the Law of Nations 22
3 On realism, especially in international relations 52
4 Professor Carr on international morality 67
Ⅱ HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 95
5 International law and colonial questions, 1870-1914 95
6 International law after the Covenant 145
7 International law after the Second World War 159
Ⅲ SOURCES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 173
8 Private law sources and analogies of international law 173
9 Some observations on the prohibition of ‘non liquet’ and the completeness of the law 213
10 Decisions of municipal courts as a source of international law 238
11Codification and development of international law 269
Ⅳ THE WRITERS AND DOCTRINE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 307
12 The Grotian tradition in international law 307
13 Spinoza and international law 366
14 Westlake and present day international law 385
15 Kelsen’s pure science of law 404
16 Brierly’s contribution to international law 431
17 The so-called Anglo-American and Continental schools of thought in international law 452
Ⅴ THE SUBJECTS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 487
18 The subjects of the Law of Nations 487
Ⅵ THE RELATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW TO MUNICIPAL LAW 537
19 Is international law part of the law of England? 537
Index 571