In Foundations of World Order Francis Anthony Boyle provides the first historically comprehensive analysis of U.S. foreign policy regarding international law and organizations. Examining the period from the Spanish American War to the establishment of the League of Nations and the Permanent Court of International Justice, Boyle argues that the international legal framework created at the beginning of the twentieth century not only influenced the course of American foreign policy but also provided the foundation upon which relations among states were built.
Although both the League of Nations and the Permanent Court of International Justice were rejected by the U.S. Senate, Boyle shows how the early governance of these institutions—precursors, respectively, to the United Nations and the International Court of Justice—informed later efforts to reduce and regulate transnational threats and the use of military force. Delving into such topics as the United States and its initial stance of neutrality in World War I and its imperial policy toward Latin America and the Caribbean, Boyle offers detailed readings of the relevant treaties, tribunals, and conferences, and assesses the political actors involved. Taking up the legalist point of view, he discusses the codification of customary international law, the obligatory arbitration of international disputes, and the creation of a new regime for the settlement of such disputes.
Boyle has provided in Foundations of World Order a compelling portrait of the relationship between political power and law, and of the impact of these forces on U.S. diplomacy. This volume will serve as a valuable resource to students, scholars, and practitioners of international law; it will also be of great interest to historians and political scientists engaged with issues of U.S. foreign policy and diplomatic history.
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. The Legalist Approach to International Relations
- Chapter 2. The Obligatory Arbitration of International Disputes
- Chapter 3. The Foundation of an International Court of Justice
- Chapter 4. The Codification of Customary International Law
- Chapter 5. Creating a New Regime for the Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes
- Chapter 6. U.S. Legalist Imperial Policy toward Latin America, the Caribbean, and the Far East
- Chapter 7. The Foundation of the Inter-American System of International Relations and Its Central American Subsystem
- Chapter 8. U.S. Neutrality toward the First World War
- Conclusion
- Appendix. International Law and the Use of Force: Beyond Regime Theory
- Notes
- Index