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On the Law of Nations Daniel Patrick Moynihan

On the Law of Nations By Daniel Patrick Moynihan

On the Law of Nations by Daniel Patrick Moynihan


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Summary

Our founding fathers had a firm grasp on the importance and centrality of international law, Daniel Patrick Moynihan writes; later presidents affirmed it and tried to establish international institutions based on such high principles, but we lost our way in the fog of the Cold War.

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On the Law of Nations Summary

On the Law of Nations by Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Foreign Policy. "In the annals of forgetfulness there is nothing quite to compare with the fading from the American mind of the idea of the law of nations." Grenada. "We might have benefited from a weekend's pause in which we could have considered our interests rather than merely giving in to our impulses." The mining of Nicaraguan harbors. "A practice of deception mutated into a policy of deceit." Iran-Contra. "The idea of international law had faded. But just as important, in the 1980s it had come to be associated with weaknesses in foreign policy. Real men did not cite Grotius." As the era of totalitarianism recedes, the time is at hand to ask by what rules we expect to conduct ourselves, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan writes in this pellucid, and often ironic, examination of international law. Our founding fathers had a firm grasp on the importance and centrality of such law; later presidents affirmed it and tried to establish international institutions based on such high principles; but we lost our way in the fog of the Cold War. Moynihan's exploration of American attitudes toward international law-those of presidents, senators, congressmen, public officials, and the public at large-reveals the abiding reverence for a law of nations and the attempts for almost two hundred years to make international law the centerpiece of foreign and strategic policy. Only in the last decade did a shift in values at the highest levels of government change the goals and conduct of the United States. Displaying a firm grasp of history, informed by senatorial insights and investigative data, elegantly written, this book is a triumph of scholarship, interpretation, and insight.

On the Law of Nations Reviews

An elegant and persuasive history-cum-argument about international law...[It] is not only a forceful elucidation of the subject; it is a cri de tete of a man who often sees things more accurately than others. -- Roger Rosenblatt New York Times Book Review On the Law of Nations is thoughtful and timely, even as Moynihan himself is the refutation of the claim that the United States produces no politicians capable of expressing original thought in their own unghosted words. -- Jack Miles Los Angeles Times Book Review In this erudite yet immensely readable brief history of American internationalism in the twentieth century, with its far-ranging and provocative discourses on the issues to which that internationalism has given rise, [Moynihan] deplores [the] trends against which Wilson warned...He takes the long view; he converses on easy terms, across the centuries, with the great thinkers of the past; and his discourse is informed by an exalted sense of what it is to be an American. -- David Fromkin Washington Post Book World Leave it to the senior senator from New York, whose career has been one long and exhilarating assault on conventional wisdom, to bring order to the chaos with an old but still provocative idea: let there be law...In this richly textured, idiosyncratically written (no ghostwriters here), but compelling book, Senator Moynihan argues that international law, often regarded as our century's answer to alchemy, is in fact a powerful tool for stability and justice. Washington Monthly An impassioned and well-reasoned plea for a return to the rule of international law...Sure to raise hackles--and hopes--in D.C. and beyond. Kirkus Reviews Introducing international law into discussion,' writes Pat Moynihan, 'almost invariably sets off a reaction.' This book is no exception. It is a learned, witty, and politically savvy defense of the subject, and an important contribution to thinking about the post-cold war world. -- Joseph S. Nye, Jr. Center for Science and International Affairs, John F Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University The book will have a notable and useful impact in the continuing debate over the role of morality, law, and organization in American foreign policy and what we stand for in the world. It is a pleasure to read for wit and passion; it gilds the philosophic pill and makes erudition seem fun... To those watching the general collapse of Communist ideology and feeling privileged to be present at yet another creation, it is a cautionary tale warning against the excessive optimism of naive moralisms and the naivete of self-proclaimed 'realists' whose ignorance has cost us too much already. -- Alfred Rubin The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University

About Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Daniel Patrick Moynihan was the author of numerous books, including On the Law of Nations, and coeditor (with Nathan Glazer) of Ethnicity, both from Harvard.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Peace 2. War 3. Wilson 4. Roosevelt 5. "Big White Space" 6. "Pacta Sunt Servanda!" 7. A Normless Normalcy? Notes Index

Additional information

CIN0674635760G
9780674635760
0674635760
On the Law of Nations by Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Used - Good
Paperback
Harvard University Press
1992-03-06
211
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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