Jochen von Bernstorff is a Senior Fellow of the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg and a Lecturer at the University of Mannheim. As a legal adviser in the UN Department of the German Federal Foreign Office, he was a Member of the German Delegation at the Commission on Human Rights in Geneva in 2004 and 2005 and the UN Human Rights Council in 2006, as well as a Member of the German Delegation at the UN General Assembly in 2003, 2004 and 2005 in New York.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Method and construction of international law in nineteenth century German scholarship 2. Kelsenian formalism as critical methodology in international law 3. An 'objective' architecture of international law: Kelsen, Kunz, and Verdross 4. The new actors of universal law 5. Legal sources as universal instruments of law creation 6. The international judiciary as the functional center of universal law 7. The role of the international legal scholar in Kelsen - a concluding reflection Epilogue. On Kelsenian formalism in international law.
1. Method and construction of international law in nineteenth century German scholarship 2. Kelsenian formalism as critical methodology in international law 3. An 'objective' architecture of international law: Kelsen, Kunz, and Verdross 4. The new actors of universal law 5. Legal sources as universal instruments of law creation 6. The international judiciary as the functional center of universal law 7. The role of the international legal scholar in Kelsen - a concluding reflection Epilogue. On Kelsenian formalism in international law.
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