International Law and International Relations: a Problematic and/or a Harmonious Relationship
Abstract
The paper focuses on the relationship between International Law and International
Relations, i.e. on their interconnectedness as a substantial issue both from theoretical
and practical point of view. The starting premise is that although they constitute distinct
academic disciplines, the objects of their interest can hardly be analysed in isolation from
each other. Even those who disagree with the thesis of their academic synergy, acknowledge
that with no international law there could be no international relations; also, the practice
of international politics is a ground that breeds international legal norms. In the analysis
of this rather complex relationship, a special emphasis is placed on the need for deconstruction
of the wide-spread myth that international law is by default ‘good’ (i.e. positive in
a normative sense of the word), while the international politics is to be blamed for all the
bad things that happen in the international arena. Instead, we make an attempt to shed
some light on the most important strategic and moral limits of the international law, in order
to induce a more critical viewpoint on the relations between power, politics and law in
the international arena. The paper ends with some suggestions about the need for development
of an innovative research agenda in elaboration of this relationship.
Downloads
Copyright (c) 2018 Biljana Vankovska

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.