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Rules, Norms, and Decisions: On the Conditions of Practical and Legal Reasoning in International Relations and Domestic Affairs PDF

327 Pages·1989·4.95 MB·English
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Rules, norms, and decisions CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: 2 Editorial Board SMITH(Managingeditor) STEVE KAL HOLST!,R OBERT S.L ITWA K, MICHAEL NICHOLSON WILLIAM OLSON, ADAM ROBERTS, JOHN SIMPSON, JACK SPENCE, SUSAN STRANGE, ROGER TOOZE, JOHN A. VASQUEZ, JOHN VINCENT Cambridge Studies in International Relations is a joint initiative of Cambridge University Press and the British International Studies Association (BISA). The series will include a wide range of material, from undergraduate textbooks and surveys to research-based monographs and collaborative volumes. The aim of the series is to publish the best new scholarship in International Studies from Europe, North America and the rest of the world. Cambridge Studies in International Relations 1 MYLES L.C . ROBERTSON Soviet policy towards Japan An analysis of trends in the 1970s and 1980s 2 FRIEDRICH V. KRATOCHWIL Rules, norms and decisions On the conditions of practical and legal reasoning in international relations and domestic affairs 3 MICHAEL NICHOLSON Formal theories in international relations 4 MICHAEL C. PUGH The ANZUS crisis, nuclear visiting and deterrence 5 STEPHEN GILL American hegemony and the Trilateral Commission 6 HIDEMI SUGANAMI The domestic analogy and world order proposals 7 IAN CLARK The hierarchy of states Reform and resistance in the international order 8 ZEEV MAOZ National choices and international processes 9 WILLIAM BLOOM Personal identity, national identity and international relations 10 JAMES MAY ALL Nationalism and international society 11 JAMES BARBER and JOHN BARRATT South Africa's foreign policy The search for status and security 1945-1988 12 ROBERT H. JACKSON Quasi-states: sovereignty, international relations and the Third World 13 SAKI DOCKRILL Britain's policy for West German rearmament 1950-1955 14 KALEVI J.H OLST! Peace and war: armed conflicts and the international order 1648-1989 15 DEON GELDENHUYS Isolated states: a comparative analysis 16 CHARLES F. DORAN Systems in crisis New imperatives of high politics at century's end RULES, NORMS, AND DECISIONS On the conditions of practical and legal reasoning in international refations and domestic affairs FRIEDRICH V. KRATOCHWIL University of Pennsylvania· CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS CambridNgeew,Y ork, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, SaoP aulDoe,l hi, DTuobkayiMo,e, x icCoi ty CambridUgnei verPsrietsys TheE dinburBguhi lding, CaCmBb2r8 iRdUg,Ue K Publisihne dt he UnitoefdA mSetraitbceyas CambridUgnei verPsrietsyNs e,w Y ork ww.w cambridge.org Informaotnito hni s wwtid.wec:a mbridge.org/978052I4097n © CambridUgnei verPsrietIsy9s 8 9 Thipsu blicaitsi ocinon p ryighStu.b jetcost t atuteoxrcye ption and top rtohvei soifo nrse lceovlalnetc ltiicveen saignrge ements, nor eproducotfai noynp armta yt akpel acwei thotuhte written permissoifo nC ambrUindigvee rPsrietsys . Firpsutb lisIh9e8d9 ReprinIt9e9d0 Firpsatp erbeadcikt iIo9n9 I ReprinIt9e9d5 catalogue recordfo r this publication is available from the British Library A Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data KratochFwriile,d rVi ch Rulenso,r ms, daencdi sioonnt sh:ec onditioofn sp ractical andl egraela soniinngt eirnn atrieolnaatlai nodnd so mestic affaiI rFsr iedrKircaht ochwil. p. cm.- (Cambrisdtgued iieni sn ternatrieolnaatli ons) Bibliography. Incluidnedse x. ISBNo 523I5 39X8 r.I nternatliaow-n Pahli losop2h.Iy n.t ernatiroenlaalt -ions Philosop3h.Ly a.w P-hilosopIh.Ty it.l e.I IS.e ries. JXr2456.7KI989 34'I. or-dc8l89- 2347CII P ISBN 978-0-521-H3a5r3d9b8a-c4k ISBN 978-o-521-P4a0p9e7rIb-aIc k CambridUgnei verPsriethsyas s n or esponsifboirl ipttyeh res istoern ce accuroafcUyR Ls feoxrt eronrat lh ird-pianrtteyrw neebts irteefse rtroie nd this publicadtoieonsno ,tg uaanrda nttheaeat n yc onteonnts ucwhe bsiitse,s orw ilrle maianc,c uroarta ep proprIinaftoer.m arteigoanr dpirnigc tersa,v el timetabalnedos t,h efra ctiunaflo rmagtiivoenin n twhoirski s c orreactt thet imoef f irpsrti ntbiuntgC ambridUgnei verPsrietdsyos enso t guarantee thea ccuroafcsy u cihn formatthieornte earf. To my friends cKT w11tf> of31.pTci1w1111 8fl'1.p oaW?rw11 plya.K lp8dopsw T oia,,.8oAf1.T a.•s· T,a.�ao yf.'a. p1..,.,.' 'wl.,. po11a.1...,.,�s, pol'f.Sa.. 1., i p/ya.T' 'f'Wl'Tf.KSa. ril " Kai ,,.c).\w op9o8[KQ.f.OI' wplf.i/JTf.fr GvrWS 8u£yol'T'f.S. Great gain for Athens shall arise From these grim forms and threatening eyes. Then worship them with friendly heart, For theirs is friendly. Let your State Hold justice as her chiefest prize; And land and city shall be great And glorious in every part. Aeschylus, Eumenides 990-995 CONTENTS Acknowledgements ix Introduction The resort to norms 1 1 Rules, norms, and actions: laying the conceptual 21 foundations 2 Anarchy and the state of nature: the issue of regimes in international relations 45 3 The emergence and types of norms 69 4 The force of prescriptions: Hume, Hobbes, Durkheim, and Freud on compliance with norms 95 5 The discourse on grievances: Pufendorf and the "laws of nature" as constitutive principles for the discursive 130 settlement of disputes 6 The notion of "right" 155 7 The question of "law" 181 8 The path of legal arguments 212 Conclusion The international legal order, interna­ tional systems, and the comparative analysis of the practice of states 249 Notes 263 Index 313 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This research was furthered by a grant from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation which made it possible for me to spend a year as a guest at the Geschwister Scholl Institut of the University of Munich. My sincerest thanks to the foundation and to Prof. Nikolaus von Lobkowicz, who was my academic host in Germany. I am also grateful to Columbia University, whose faculty development leave enabled me to finish the typescript. Beyond the most immediate support I am indebted to many other people who helped me over the years. Although my days of a graduate student at Princeton have long passed many of the ideas in this book are the result of the influence my two mentors Richard Falk and Robert Gilpin had on my thinking during these formative years. Ralf and Angela Bruckner gave much-needed encouragement at crucial mo­ ments. Simone Chambers proved to be an invaluable critic. My research assistants Kathrine Sikkink and Larry Reina contributed by tackling their assignments with imagination and diligence. Michael Barkun, Terry Nardin, Nicholas Onuf, and John Ruggie carefully read previous versions of this book and offered many helpful suggestions. Thomas Franck, both an eminent lawyer and social scientist, saved me from many errors by sharing his thoughts with me. In addition, I profited greatly from the discussions with Nicole Fermon, Harvey Goldman, Helen Millner, Deborah Larson, and Jack Snyder, who were exemplary colleagues and friends at the seventh­ floor "Bantustan" of Columbia's International Affairs Building. I also owe a debt of gratitude to Karen Boiko, who was kind enough to help with the proof-reading, and to Anita Mercier, Jennifer Thorn, and the staff of the War and Peace Institute of Columbia, who took care of the word-processing chores of seemingly interminable drafts. Finally, since several of the sections of this book have appeared in slightly different versions, I gratefully acknowledge the help I received from various editors of journals, including Peter Katzenstein of International Organization, Gerhard Sprenger of the Archiv fur Rechts- ix ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS und Sozialphilosophie, Kenneth Oye of World Politics, and many other reviewers who have helped me to re-think and reformulate my ideas. Errors of fact and judgment are, as always, exclusively mine. Reprint permission has been granted for the following articles, which appear in (slightly) different form as chapters or sections of this book: "On the Notion of 'Interest' in International Relations," International Organization, vol. 36, no. 1 (1982), 1-30. "Is International Law 'proper' Law?", Archiv fur Rechts-und Sozialphilo­ sophie, vol. 69, Heft 1 (1983), 13-46. "Thrasymachos Revisited: On the Relevance of Norms and the Study of Law for International Relations," Journal of International Affairs, vol. 37, no. 2 (1984), 343-356. "Errors have their Advantage," International Organization, vol. 38, no. 2 (1984), 305-320. "The Force of Prescriptions," International Organization, vol. 38, no. 4 (1984), 685-708. "The Role of Domestic Courts as Agencies of the International Legal Order," in Richard Falk, Friedrich Kratochwil, and Saul Mendlovitz (eds.), International Law, A Contemporary Perspective (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1985), cht. 13. "International Organization: A State of the Art on an Art of the State" (together with John Ruggie), International Organization, vol. 40, no. 4 (1986), 753-775. "Of Systems, Boundaries and Territoriality," World Politics, vol. 34, no. 1 (1986), 27-52, by permission of Princeton University Press. "Rules, Norms, and the Limits of 'Rationality,'" Archiv fur Rechts-und Sozialphilosophie, vol. 73, Heft 3 (1987), 301-329. "Norms and Values: Rethinking the Domestic Analogy."' Ethics and International Affairs, vol. 1 (1987), 135-160. "Diritto e Principi di Natura: Pufendorf e le leggi di natura come condizioni transcendentali di un discorso sulle controversie," Teoria Politica, vol. 4, no. 1 (1988), 3-27. "Regimes, Interpretation and the 'Science' of Politics," Millennium, vol. 17, no. 2 (1988), 263-284. x

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By assessing the impact of norms on decision making, this book argues that norms influence choices by providing reasons rather than by being causes for action. It approaches the problem via an investigation of the reasoning process in which norms play a decisive role. Professor Kratochwil argues tha
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