In: Forthcoming, in Peer Zumbansen, ed, The Many Lives of Transnational Law: Critical Engagements with Jessup's Bold Proposal (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2020).
My retrospective study, published in the twenty-fifth anniversary volume of this Yearbook, attempted a critical survey of post-war Soviet general theory of international law, and noted the signs of an intellectual changing of the guard and the emergence of a new generation of Soviet international legal theorists. Is it possible today to speak of a post-war U.S. general theory of international law, and, if so, can we speak of a generational change, in the late 1980's, similar to that in the Soviet Union?
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