No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
The Politics of International Law: U.S. Foreign Policy Reconsidered; David P. Forsythe. Lynne Rienner Publishers. Boulder Co.1990; ISBN 1-55587-208-5; xvi + 181 pp..
Review products
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 July 2009
Abstract

- Type
- Book Reviews
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 1993
References
1 For the classical formulation, see Peter, Bachrach & Baratz, Morton S., The Two Faces of Power, 56 American Political Science Review (1962).Google Scholar
2 W. Michael Reisman & Andrew R. Willard (eds.), International Incidents: The Law that Counts in World Politics (1988). For an incisive critique, see Bowett, Derek W., International Incidents: New Genre or New Delusion?, 12 Yale J. Int'l L. (1987).Google Scholar
3 According to Wiliard, a meaningful exercise of the ‘incidents approach’ amounts to 25 separate steps, grouped together under 6 different headings. See A.R. Wiliard, ‘Incidents: an essay in method’, in Reisman & Wiliard, supra note 2.
4 See, especially, Henkin's classic How Nations Behave, (1979), 2nd ed..