Justice among Nations. A History of International Law - Stephen C. Neff

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  1. On the French Revolution and international law, see Ernest Nys, Études de
    droit international et de droit politique (Brussels: Alfred Castaigne, 1896), 318– 406;
    and Robert Redslob, Histoire des grands principes du droit des gens depuis l’antiquité
    jusqu’ à la veille de la Grande Guerre (Paris: A. Rousseau, 1923), 275– 332.

  2. On the various specifi c disputes giving rise to the wars in the revolutionary
    period, see generally T. C. W. Blanning, Th e Origins of the French Revolutionary Wars
    (London: Longman, 1986).

  3. Wilhelm G. Grewe, ed., Fontes Historiae Juris Gentium: Sources Relating to the
    History of the Law of Nations, vol. 2 (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1992), 647– 49.

  4. David A. Bell, Th e First Total War: Napoleon’s Eu rope and the Birth of Modern
    War fare (London: Bloomsbury, 2007), 105.

  5. Norman D. Bentwich, Th e Law of Private Property in War (London: Sweet and
    Maxwell, 1907), 85.

  6. France- Spain, Family Compact, Aug. 15, 1761, 42 CTS 85.

  7. Patricia Chastain Howe, Foreign Policy and the French Revolution: Charles-
    François Dumouriez, Pierre LeBrun, and the Belgian Plan, 1789– 1793 (Basingstoke:
    Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), 114, 141.

  8. Declaration of Pilnitz, Aug. 27, 1791, 51 CTS 233.

  9. See Chapters 7 and 11 for debates about the principle of humanitarian
    intervention.

  10. Grewe, ed., Fontes, vol. 2, 652– 56; and Bell, First Total War, 14 4.

  11. Bell, First Total War, 117.

  12. Grewe, ed., Fontes, vol. 2, 658– 59.

  13. John H. Herz, “Idealist Internationalism and the Security Dilemma,” 2
    World Politics 157– 80 (1951), 167. See also Marc Belissa, Fraternité universelle et in-
    téret national (1713– 1795): Les cosmopolitiques du droit des gens (Paris: Kimé, 1998),
    371– 74.

  14. Grewe, ed., Fontes, vol. 2, 660– 61. See also Belissa, Fraternité universelle, 365–
    77, 419– 20.

  15. Ernest Nys, “Th e Codifi cation of International Law,” 5 AJIL 871– 900 (1911),
    890; and La Pradelle, Maîtres et doctrines, 172– 74.

  16. Robert Ward, An Enquiry into the Foundation and History of the Law of
    Nations, from the Time of the Greeks and Romans to the Age of Grotius, vol. 1 (London:
    J. Butterworth, 1795), xii– xiii. See also Randall Lesaff er, “Roman Law and the Early
    Historiography of International Law: Ward, Wheaton, Hosack and Walker,” in Th ilo
    Marauhn and Heinhard Steiger, eds., Universality and Continuity in International
    Law, 149 – 8 4 (Th e Hague: Eleven International, 2011), 155– 57.

  17. Nys, “Codifi cation,” 892– 93.

  18. Martens, Précis, xv– xvi.

  19. Jeremy Bentham, A Fragment on Government and an Introduction to the Prin-
    ciples of Morals and Legislation, ed. Wilfrid Harrison (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1960
    [178 9]), 4 2 6.


Notes to Pages 206–210 515

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