Here I follow Arthur Ripstein's Kantian account in “Authority and Coercion,” Philosophy & Public Affairs 32 (2004), pp. 2–35, “Beyond the Harm Principle,” and Arthur Ripstein, Force and Freedom (Cambridge, Mass.
The essays in this collection examine the nature of legitimacy, the legitimacy of the state, and the legitimacy of supranational institutions. The collection begins by asking: What sort of problem is legitimacy?
"ICC Congress Series no. 18 comprises the proceedings of the twenty-second Congress of the International Arbitration Congress, held in Miami in 2014." -- Back cover.
Such interpretation and law-making may combine several of the five services. States are often unable or unwilling to specify treaties fully, preferring to agree to 'deliberately incomplete contracts', the gaps in which the judges must ...
What makes a government legitimate? Arthur Isak Applbaum rigorously argues that the greatest threat to democracies today is not loss of basic rights or despotism.
This book documents the bases for a new view of legitimacy in general and in various parts of Asia, including China, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.