International law on the left : re-examining Marxist legacies / editor, Susan Marks. - x, 319 pages ; 23 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- What should international lawyers learn from Karl Marx? / An outline of a Marxist course on public international law / The commodity-form theory of international law / Positivism versus self-determination: the contradictions of Soviet international law / Marxism and international law: perspectives for the American (twenty-first) century? / Toward a radical political economy critique of transnational economic law / Marxian insights for the human rights project / Marxian embraces (and de-couplings) in Upendra Baxi's human rights scholarship: a case study / Exploitation as an international legal concept / Martti Koskenniemi -- B. S. Chimni -- Zchina Mieville -- Bill Bowring -- Anthony Carty -- A. Claire Cutler -- Brad R. Roth -- Obiora Chinedu Okafor -- Susan Marks. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

"Against expectations that the turn away from state socialism would likewise initiate a turn away from Marxist thought, recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in Marxism and its reassessment by a new generation of theorists. This book pursues that interest with specific reference to international law. It presents a sustained and ground-breaking exploration of the pertinence of Marxist ideas, concepts and analytical practices for international legal enquiry from a range of angles. Essays consider the relationship between Marxism and critical approaches to international law, the legacy of Soviet international legal theory, the bearing of Marxism for the analysis of international trade law and human rights, and the significance for international legal enquiry of such Marxist concepts as the commodity, praxis and exploitation."--Publisher's website.

0521882559 9780521882552

2008274239


International law and socialism

KZ1250 / .I58 2008

341.01