A review of some of the legacies of Vitoria for international legal scholarship accompanies, in the first pan, a retrospective gaze at the first third of the Twentieth century, in order to examine how the founder of the American Society of International Law, James Brown Scott, contributed to (re)establish Vitoria as the father of international law in the inter-war years. The second part provides a genealogy of the critical front of the Vitorian revival in international law today. Special attention is, then, paid to some of the intellectual building-blocks and programmatic tenets which have inspired a Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) anti-imperial narrative of the international legal order along with a TWAlL's re-interpretation and re-contextualisation of the works of the sixteenth century's Prima professor of Sacred Theology at the University of Salamanca. The conclusion reflects on the lasting legacy of the Spanish Classics in the American tradition of international law.
Both state-centrism and Eurocentrism are under challenge in international law today. This article argues that this double challenge is mirrored back into the study of the history of international law. It examines the effects of the rise of positivism as a method of norm-identification and the role of methodological nationalism upon the study of the history of international law in the modern foundational period of international law. It extends this by examining how this bequeathed a double exclusionary bias regarding time and space to the study of the history of international law as well as a reiterative focus on a series of canonical events and authors to the exclusion of others such as those related to the Islamic history of international law. It then analyses why this state of historiographical affairs is changing, highlighting intra-disciplinary developments within the field of the history of international law and the effects that the ‘international turn in the writing of history’ is having on the writing of a new history of international law for a global age. It concludes with a reflection on some of the tasks ahead, providing a series of historiographical signposts for the history of international law as a field of new research.
La revue Cuadernos para el Diálogo (1963-1978) a joué un rôle-clé en alimentant le terreau intellectuel durant la transition espagnole vers la démocratie et elle a engendré une littérature conséquente chez les historiens. Cet article relie la trajectoire de ce mensuel emblématique à la brève période d’innovation méthodologique et historiographique de la Revista Española de Derecho Internacional – la Revue espagnole de droit international – dirigée par le juriste international Mariano Aguilar Navarro.
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