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International Law: Cases and Materials (American Casebook)
Published in Hardcover by West Wadsworth (1993)
Authors: Louis Henkin, Richard Crawford Pugh, Oscar Schachter, and Hans Smit
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A superb introduction to international law
This book provides a well organised and carefully edited introduction to international law. Exerpts from relevant cases, international agreements and juristic writings are interwoven with insightful commentary and questions. Each topic is introduced and explained in the text. As an earlier reviewer noted, some aspects of the book are now outdated, and it is to be hoped that a revised edition will eventually be published. Also, the chapters on jurisdiction and immunity therefrom, concentrate, in large part though not entirely, on the legislation enacted in the United States, which may not be of interest to readers who reside elsewhere. I read this book while studying a basic course in international law, which covered the sources of international law, the law of treaties, the United Nations system, jurisdiction, immunity from jurisdiction, the use of force and state responsibility. I found that the level of detail presented in the book corresponded closely to that of the course itself. I also found the text to be an excellent starting point for research, although as I turned to more specific areas of international law it became necessary, as one would expect, to consult more specialized references. In conclusion, this book, though out of date in some respects, still provides an outstanding introduction to the subject which I would definitely recommend.

Delve deeper into international law
If Akerhurst's Modern Introduction to International Law can be said to be a quick overview for students beginning to study international law, Henkin's International Law is for those who already have some study behind them and are ready to delve more deeply into specific issues. At first the format of the book may seem confusing, for unlike introductory works like Akehurst in which the author writes the entire text in his own words, Henkin is filled with actual case judgements, tribunal decisions, articles of law, and the opionions of other journalists (although less so than Harris's International Law : Cases and Materials). At times, the actual text of the book seem little more than footnotes to the the above. However, unlike Akehurst, which tends to stick to one viewpoint, this vast amount of material enables Henkin to illuminate the areas of controversy in international law and helps the reader to build his own opinions. One problem with this book, however, is that the third edition came out in 1993 and is therefore rather dated, especially in terms of international economic law. For instance, it fails to take into account the WTO and EU. However, the traditional areas of international law are well documented, and even the dated parts of the book still have relevance to the issues important today. This is definitely a book to have at hand when making a study of international law in general or dealing with a specific issue that involves international law.


International Law: Politics and Values (Developments in International Law ; V. 18)
Published in Hardcover by Martinus Nijhoff (1995)
Author: Louis Henkin
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A New Light on Human Rights and the Role of the State
Among many outstanding books and articles written by Louis Henkin, two themes always stand out: the right of the individuals in the international community and the role of the states in the inter-state system. The various essays collected in the present volume represent the most thorough treatment on these important concerns of the author throughout his illustrious career.

The author makes thorough examination of the role of the states in the inter-state system upon which modern international law is based. He analyzes and evaluates the functioning of international law in regulating inter-state behavior by providing certain extent of autonomy and consent to the states in exchange of compliance to the norms by these states. In so doing, Henkin takes pain to explain the interplay between law and politics at the international level, commenting and reflecting on its pluralism, fragmentation, and heterogeneity.

Whiling treating the "state" as the central and unifying concept in explaining the principles of international law, Louis Henkin never lost sight of the ever changing role as well as the content of "state" in the modern world. In fact, he always reminds the reader that the states do not exist for themselves but for the safeguarding of human values at the end. This leads to his overall and persistent concern for the protection of universal human rights in the international community as well as within individual states. Here one finds that Louis Henkin is not a defender of the idea of "absolute sovereignty" so far as the violation of basic human rights is concerned.

This is a not a book for beginners trying to have a systematic treatment of various topics under conventional international law. Yet it is an excellent source of consultation and inspiration for any serious students of international law who want to have a deeper understanding of the basic principles regarding the role of the state, the idea of sovereignty, the right of the individuals in the international community, and where international law will be heading and should be evolving in the Twenty-first Century.


Foreign Affairs and the United States Constitution
Published in Paperback by Oxford Univ Pr on Demand (1997)
Author: Louis Henkin
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Good, but a little conclusory and politicized
This is an excellent book. It's amazing that so much important information can be packed into such a short space.

That said, however, the book does has a couple of shortcomings, a couple of which I will be happy to point out. First, professor Henkin doesn't adequately account for trends in Supreme Court jurisprudence that will have the effect of seriously curtailing the application of international organizations and covenants to the United States. Professor Henkin states that "federalism...rarely raises its head in foreign affairs." Wrong! This is professor Henkin's most serious analytical error. Federalism has been reinvigorated in the past few years, and there's no end in sight to its resurgence. From New York v. US, to Lopez, to Printz, to Seminole Tribe the Supreme Court has determined that the tenth and eleventh amendments are not to be rolled over on a federal whim. The recent case of that Paraguayan butcher and attempted rapist, Angel Breard, is a case in point. The Supreme Court denied his claim, AND that of the Paraguayan consular officials who claimed a violation of the Vienna Convention. Why did the Supreme Court turn down the appeals? Because of the eleventh Amendment, of course. The Supreme Court has strengthened the eleventh Amendment in Seminole Tribe and Coeur D'Alene to the extent that certain treaties are no longer enforceable (except for continuing violations that fall within the Ex Parte Young doctrine) within our federal structure. This is a HUGE development, and it cannot be ignored, especially when the trend is toward more and more intrusion into what are typically thought of as state functions.

Second, one gets the feeling that professor Henkin's analytical mode is being directed by what he considers higher values. A small example: on p. 71 he claims that the Foreign Affairs power reaches *any* domestic, purely internal activity, in order to alleviate poverty, alienation etc. etc. That's a passionate defense of left-wing American liberalism, unlim! ited federal power, and statism; it is not, however, a serious analysis of constitutionalism. One is inevitably led to the conclusion that professor Henkin's constitutional analysis is a servant to his politics; it leads a wide-eyed, naive reader to wonder what arguments professor Henkin has failed to make that would take away from his cherished political point of view.

So enjoy this book, it's the best of its kind. But beware...END

Enjoyable reading, written with literary grace
Reviewed by Vladimir Matveyev in International Relations, Volume XIII, No 6, December 1997,

Nearly 25 years have passed since the publication of the first edition of this book. It has become almost a classic text. This is a much-anticipated new edition, reconceived, reorganized and updated by the author. Professor Henkin has added to his comprehensive list of judicial decisions and opinions explaining and interpreting the US Constitution in the field of foreign affairs. The newest and most important ones encompass confusion in the US foreign policy machinery in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and in the last decades of the Cold War. His references for the legal documents, on which the analysis is largely based, are unparalleled and crucial for understanding the issues unravelled by the author.
As Professor Henkin notes, 'where foreign relations are concerned the Constitution seems a strange, laconic document'. There are a few lines conferring a limited number of functions upon either the President or the Congress, or directing them to act jointly. From this it might seem that the well-publicized and extensive foreign policy prerogatives of the US President are extra-constitutional, or even unconstitutional. This is not the case. As Louis Henkin not infrequently remarks, the Constitution is what the Supreme Court and federal courts say it is. Moreover, there are substantial arguments in favour of the constitutional nature of presidential power. These are scrupulously analysed by the author in a special chapter dealing with the President's power as well as in another chapter devoted to the allocation of foreign affairs powers in different branches of the federal government. Some arguments have their roots in history. In the opinion of Justice Sutherland, quoted by professor Henkin, the powers of the US to conduct relations with other nations do not derive only from the text of the Constitution. As Justice Sutherland commented in 1936, 'external sovereignty' passed directly from the British Crown to the Union of States as a collective entity. Thus, the Constitution did not declare or enumerate the power of external sovereignty; it assumed it.
The extent of presidential power can also be explained by the need for it as a result of the exigencies of international relations (particularly, in the age of nuclear weapons), by the dramatic rise of the United States role in world affairs, and by the practices of diplomacy. More than 200 years ago, after much consideration, the framers of the Constitution adjudged that Congress should have the leading role with the Executive second in command. In practice, however, these roles have been reversed in the making of foreign policy. For many reasons, Congress is less efficient in communicating with foreign governments. Only the President, as the main organ of communication, 'can act quickly, informally, secretly'.
It could also be considered that the Constitutional clause vesting in the President 'the executive power' automatically gives him all authority over foreign relations. When Alexander Hamilton mentioned this opinion in the early years of the Republic, he was immediately opposed by James Madison who portrayed it as an attempt to import into the Constitution British monarchical prerogatives. Nor do the latest Supreme Court decisions support the idea that 'the executive power' clause is a source of undisputed authority to conduct foreign relations.
A number of powers have been acquired by the President, by implication. Thus, his Constitutional power to appoint ambassadors (with the advice and consent of the Senate), other public ministers and consuls, has in practice been transformed into the power to make all appointments in the foreign policy establishment and to control the foreign relations 'apparatus'. In many instances he does so without the need of Senate approval. In other cases, such as the appointment of all Foreign Service officers, i.e. professional diplomats, that approval is largely perfunctory.
The President does not confine himself to conducting foreign relations. He makes US foreign policy, as witnessed by for example the celebrated 'Doctrines' (Monroe's, Truman's, Nixon's or Reagan's).
There have been frequent challenges to presidential actions and edicts - by Congress, by the courts, by scholars, by wider public opinion. The sharp controversy between the Executive and Congress in the 1970s resulted in the adoption of the War Powers Resolution which posed a serious challenge to the Presidency. Simultaneously Congress and the Senate became more assertive and more expert in foreign policy-making having in its ranks some Senators, who, because of their length of service, had more expertise and sophistication than that of successive Presidents.
Since that time the applicability of an 18th century Constitution to the realities at the end of the 20th century has been persistently questioned by the wider public, by experts and even by public employees. The Foreign Service Association, which represents career diplomats, constantly disputes the right of the President to nominate whomsoever he wishes to any foreign post without seriously considering the opinions of professional diplomats.
Professor Henkin acknowledges that ambiguities in the constitutional law of foreign affairs before, between and after the two World Wars, and during and after the Cold War have been 'particularly troubling, and sometimes dangerous'. Yet he disagrees with those who believe that the Constitution should be changed or at least amended. First, he believes that the division of powers in the conduct of foreign affairs is not, has not been, and cannot be what it is in domestic affairs. Hence the old assumption that foreign affairs are different is likely to survive into the 21st century. Secondly, Professor Henkin, unlike many other commentators, is not inclined to over-dramatize disturbances in the foreign policy process. 'Conflict never quite becomes all-out war, confusion is not quite chaos, frustration does not grind government to a standstill. Like the proverbial "love - hate" marriage, that of Congress and President goes on: that the tensions continue and recur, that the arguments, constitutional and political, repeat and re-echo, may only suggest that it will go on'. Moreover, he remarks that the disturbances are not 'due to constitutional uncertainty and issue: it is what the Constitution intended'. In other words, the separation of powers and the system of checks and balances designed by the Founding Fathers provides for the inevitable struggle for power between the various branches of government. It also provided for, and will certainly continue to ensure, the adoption of foreign policy options best suited for a democratic nation. It never allowed any single organ or institution to acquire full control of foreign affairs inconsistent with pluralistic approaches to foreign policy-making.
'I do not suggest that our system is the best of all possible systems or that it is working well, only that it cannot be effectively improved by constitutional amendment', writes Professor Henkin. Yet, the author is not at all convinced that there is no scope for improvement. On this, some sections of the book are especially noteworthy and thought-provoking - in particular, the chapters covering the role of individual rights and of the courts in foreign affairs. Individual rights guaranteed by the Constitution, by the Bill of Rights and by a number of Amendments to the Constitution, can be a source of constitutional limitation on foreign policy and process. Professor Henkin observes that in the relatively few Supreme court cases in which the balance between freedom of expression and national foreign policy are an issue, so far foreign policy interests have prevailed. He cites only one case, the Pentagon papers case, where the first Amendment clearly prevailed: the Supreme Court refused to grant the Executive an injunction preventing press publication of 'classified' material.
The author believes that 'respect for individual rights ra


The Age of Rights
Published in Paperback by Columbia University Press (15 May, 1990)
Author: Louis Henkin
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Arms control and inspection in American law
Published in Unknown Binding by Greenwood Press ()
Author: Louis Henkin
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Basic Documents Supplement to International Law
Published in Paperback by West Wadsworth (1993)
Authors: Louis Henkin, Hans Smit, and Oscar Schachter
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Basic Documents Supplement to International Law: Cases and Materials
Published in Paperback by West Wadsworth (2002)
Authors: Lori Damrosch, Louis Henkin, Richard Crawford Pugh, Oscar Schachter, and Hans Smit
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Constitutionalism and Rights
Published in Hardcover by Columbia University Press (15 October, 1989)
Authors: Louis Henkin and Albert J. Rosenthal
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Constitutionalism, Democracy, and Foreign Affairs
Published in Paperback by Columbia University Press (15 June, 1990)
Author: Louis Henkin
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Foreign Affairs and the Constitution
Published in Paperback by W.W. Norton & Company (1975)
Author: Louis Henkin
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