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Law of Nations, The |
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(Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics)
By Emer de Vattel Edited and with an Introduction by Béla Kapossy and Richard Whatmore Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics, Knud Haakonssen, General Editor
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Table of Contents
Publication Date: June 2008
6 x 9. 896 pages. Editor's introduction, note on the texts, editors' annotations, three early essays by Vattel, bibliographical sketch of authors referred to by Vattel, bibliographies, index.
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Cloth |
0-86597-450-0 |
978-0-86597-450-0 |
$24.00 |
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Paperback |
0-86597-451-9 |
978-0-86597-451-7 |
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The great eighteenth-century theorist of international
law Emer de Vattel (1714–1767) was a key
figure in sustaining the practical and theoretical
influence of natural jurisprudence through the
Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras. Coming toward
the end of the period when the discourse of natural
law was dominant in European political theory,
Vattel’s contribution is cited as a major source of
contemporary wisdom on questions of international
law in the American Revolution and even by opponents
of revolution, such as Cardinal Consalvi, at the
Congress of Vienna of 1815.
Vattel broadly accepted the early-modern natural
law theorists from Grotius onward but placed himself
in the tradition of Leibniz and Christian Wolff. This
becomes particularly clear in two valuable early essays
that have never before been translated and are
included in the present volume. On this philosophical
basis he established what the proper relationship
should be between natural law as it is applied to
individuals and natural law as it is applied to states.
The significance of The Law of Nations resides
in its distillation from natural law of an apt model for
international conduct of state affairs that carried
conviction in both the Old Regime and the new
political order of 1789–1815.
The Liberty Fund edition is based on the
anonymous English translation of 1797, which
includes Vattel’s notes for the second French edition
(posthumous, 1773).
Emer de Vattel (1714–1767)
was a Swiss philosopher and jurist in
the service of Saxony.
Béla Kapossy is Professeur Suppléant of History at the University of Lausanne.
Richard Whatmore is a Reader in Intellectual History at the University of Sussex.
Knud Haakonssen is Professor of Intellectual History at the University of Sussex, England.
Additional Testimonials
. . . A beautiful book with and without the cover, it has generous margins, a ribbon page marker that harmonizes with the cover, and sells for only [$24.00]. The Law of Nations was a monumental contribution to international law and to political economy. Vattel developed a theory of the cultural, political, and economic conditions necessary for a viable system of international justice, and his principles of how civilized nations should conduct themselves toward other nations and their citizens provide essential contextualization for eighteenth-century thought. The decision to reprint the 1797 translation rather than provide a new one might be questioned, but it reads well, retains the section numbers and guides in the margins, has several kinds of notes as well as translations of Vattel's Latin citations, and stands up well to the new translations of three of Vattel's essays that are included in the volume. The 1797 prose is true to Vattel's highly reasoning and reasonable style and displays the best features of polished eighteenth-century prose.
Studies in English Literature Summer 2009
This is an English translation of Emer de Vattel's hugely influential 1758 work Droit des gens. Vattel systematically derived principles of international law from natural law and also synthesized the modern discourse of natural jurisprudence with the language of political economy. . . . The volume also contains biographical sketches of authors referred to by Vattel and bibliographies of works referred to by Vattel and writings on Vattel.
Reference & Research Book News August 2008 What makes up the basis of what's called an honorable practice in today's world? The Law of Nations is a new and updated edition of Emer de Vattel's classic writing from over two hundred years ago. Despite its age, its wisdom holds true even today, touching on how nations ought to act when dealing with one another in order to promote peace and prosperity. Enhanced with an index and many informative appendixes, The Law of Nations is a top pick for anyone who would educate themselves with this international judicial studies classic from the Enlightenment period.
The Midwest Book Review August 2008
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