Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ah.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/79412
題名: THE DISCIPLINE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW IN REPUBLICAN CHINA AND CONTEMPORARY TAIWAN
作者: HSIEH, PASHA L.
謝笠天
貢獻者: 法律系
日期: 2015
上傳時間: 25-Nov-2015
摘要: This Article examines the evolution of international law as a professional and intellectual discipline in the Republic of China (ROC), which has governed Mainland China (1912-1949) and post-1949 Taiwan. The ROC`s centennial development fundamentally shaped modern China`s course of foreign relations and postwar global governance. The Article argues that statism, pragmatism, and idealism define the major features of the ROC`s approach to international law. These characteristics transformed the law of nations into universally valid normative claims and prompted modern China`s intellectual focus on the civilized nation concept. First, the Article analyzes the professionalization of the discipline of international law. It offers insight into the cultivation of China`s firstgeneration international lawyers in the Foreign Ministry, international law societies, and the Shanghai Mixed Court. Second, it explores the ROC`s approach of assertive legalism in applying international law to advance diplomatic objectives. The nation`s strategic engagement with unequal treaties, the League of Nations, and the United Nations contributed to its Grotian moment. The assertion of legal claims in judicial proceedings and Taiwan`s international standing further reinforced the dynamic dimension of the discipline. Therefore, this Article provides a valuable case study of twentieth century international lawmaking in East Asia.
關聯: Washington University Global Studies Law Review, 14(1), 87-129
資料類型: article
Appears in Collections:期刊論文

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