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3 - An “objective” architecture of international law: Kelsen, Kunz, and Verdross

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2011

Jochen von Bernstorff
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, Germany
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Summary

On the basis of a critical challenge to the traditional theoretical edifice, Kelsen, Kunz, and Verdross developed their own construct of international law at the beginning of the 1920s. In contrast to Triepel and other dualists, their own “objective” theory proceeded from a unitary view of the law. From the monistic perspective, international law and national law were parts of a single, unitary legal system. Moreover, this foundation was to be used to demonstrate that international law – despite the complaints of deniers and doubters – could be conceived as a law fortified with the power of coercion. To that extent it could be subsumed under a uniform legal concept along with domestic law. International law and national law were thus part of a unitary system of norms endowed with the power of coercion. Within this overarching system, the thesis of the primacy of the law of nations was then used to place international law above national law. This objective edifice of international law reflected the confidence of Kelsen and his students in the effectiveness of the medium of international law. In the wake of the First World War, the “new” international law in the era of the League of Nations was to be available to international politics as an effective instrument for securing the peace.

Constructing a unitary system

The roots of the systems idea, which exerted a substantial influence on Kelsen's articulation of international law, are more difficult to pin down than the clearly neo-Kantian works following his Main Problems of State Law would suggest.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Public International Law Theory of Hans Kelsen
Believing in Universal Law
, pp. 78 - 118
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Simma, B., “The Contribution of Alfred Verdross to the Theory of International Law,” EJIL, 5 (1995), 41.Google Scholar
Max, Planck's 1909 monograph Die Einheit des physikalischen Weltbildes (Leipzig: Hirzel, 1909).Google Scholar
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1960), 228
Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 131–132
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 147–149
Kelsen, , Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 149
Kelsen, , Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 150.
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 152
Kelsen, , Reine Rechtslehre (1934).
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 84–89.
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1960), 209.
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1960), 331
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1960), 331.
Kelsen, , Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 139–142
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 142
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 142
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 142.
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 141.
Kelsen, H., Reine Rechtslehre (1934), 134–135

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