A. They tend to be bound by the policies of states
B. They are limited to the scope of the legislation at hand
C. They are rhetorical as well as logical
D. b and c
International Organization, Law, and Human Rights
International Organization, Law, and Human Rights
A. The idea that legal rules have legitimacy when from their logical and practical derivation form a fundamental ‘grundnorm’
B. The idea that natural law is no different than positive law, and that they are interdependent
C. The idea that authority of legal rules comes from their status as the commands of a sovereign authority
D. a and c
A. By their inability to explain the development of law in areas where the self-interests of states are unclear
B. By the failure to explain the origins of the modern system of international law
C. By their rejection of the idea that international law constitutes the identities and interests of states
D. None of the above
A. The school where the realist approach to international law was conformed
B. It is also known as the policy approach
C. It is also known as the legal internationalism approach
D. It borrows from positivism and naturalism
A. The determinacy of international legal rules is able
B. The underlying logic of Liberalism in international law is incoherent
C. International legal thought operates within a confined intellectual structure
D. All of the above