Explaining compliance with international law: Broadening the agenda for enquiry |
| |
Authors: | Shirley V. Scott |
| |
Affiliation: | University College , University of New South Wales |
| |
Abstract: | Current theoretical understanding of compliance with international law is based on an assumption that international law consists of a finite set of objective, compulsory rules. This image does not match reality but the two can be reconciled through theorising international law as ideology. Such an approach subsumes questions as to why states do or do not obey law and what influence international law has on foreign policy decision making. By placing the relationship of state behaviour to international law in a broader perspective it can account for previously identified determinants of compliance and provide a basis on which to assess their relative significance. At the same time, the research agenda regarding compliance is broadened by the introduction of fresh questions. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|