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4 - ‘One powerful and enlightened nation’: Kant and the quest for a global rule of law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Antonio Franceschet
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary, Canada
Beate Jahn
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
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Summary

‘[T]he possession of power inevitably corrupts the free use of reason.’

– Kant

In recent years ‘classical’ international law as a body of rules, norms and conventions has been assailed by scholars and questioned by world leaders. In particular, the rules concerning sovereign equality and effective power (or control over territory) as the most salient criteria for membership in international society have been challenged. Such rules are problematic because they are supposed to be applied neutrally with regard to regime types, thus ignoring the significant differences between liberal democratic and non-liberal/authoritarian regimes. Classical international law (or right) is indifferent to internal political institutions and thus countenances governments that wield power in a lawless (or rights abusing) fashion. For generations of liberal philosophers and lawyers, this formulation of international law is problematic and contradictory. From Immanuel Kant to the present, critics of classical international law have put forward versions of the following argument: There can be no truly effective global rule of law among states if international law permanently acquiesces to the absence of the rule of law within states.

This chapter examines the use of Kant's international legal arguments by contemporary scholars. Kant provides genuine inspiration for a critique of classical international law. He is a harsh detractor of traditional international norms and practices among states that simply authorize the illegitimate use of political power. However, I contend that contemporary scholars put forward a view of legal relationships among states that Kant was careful to avoid.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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