International Incidents: The Law That Counts in World Politics
Author
: W. MICHAEL REISMAN and ANDREW R. WILLARD
Subject
: International law, political science, international jurisprudence
Publisher
: Princeton University Press
Summary :In November 1983, a notice was posted on the Yale Law School bulletin
board announcing a new seminar to be offered in the spring semester.
The seminar was called "The Incident as a Decision Unit in
International Law." Since the words in the title were not exactly terms
of art in the trivium and quadrivium, the notice set out, at rather unusual
length, what was intended:
An incident is an international dispute that shapes or reinforces
elite expectations about lawfulness, in which the appraisal of lawfulness
by relevant international actors occurs in a nonformal setting.
The Soviet destruction of KAL 007, the U.S. invasion of
Grenada and the Israeli attack on the Iraqi reactor are examples of
recent incidents. Because of the structure of the international political
system, most international decision is found in incidents
rather than cases and judgments. Yet paradoxically, there is no
accepted method for recording incidents. The discipline of international
law has adopted the notion of the national judgment as
its basic if not exclusive epistemic unit; statements of courts are
expanded by generative logic into a codex which is taken to be international law. As a result, much international jurisprudence is
not congruent with contemporary elite expectations that are reflected
in practice. It serves neither descriptive nor predictive functions,
contributing little to the performance of indispensable legal
tasks.
This seminar will attempt to develop a concise method for recording
and appraising incidents in the hope that it can install a
new genre in international law. It will use the research techniques
of contemporary historiography and political science in addition
to the methods of international law. Each student, alone or in
collaboration with another, will be responsible for researching a
particular incident. Each will circulate a draft to the other seminar
participants and explain and defend it in a session. It is planned
that the better papers in the seminar will be collected in a volume
and published.
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