PART I: INTRODUCTION
1. International Law: Theory and Practice
PART II: HISTORIES
2. Theorising the Turn to History in International Law
3. Roman Law and the Intellectual History of International Law
4. Hugo Grotius: The Making of a Founding Father of International Law
5. Transformations of Natural Law: Germany 1648-1815
6. Emer de Vattel and Modern International Law
7. The Ottoman Empire, the Origins of Extraterritoriality, and International Legal Theory
8. China and the Making of Modern International Law
9. Early Twentieth Century Positivism Revisited
10. Hans Kelsen and the Return of Universalism
11. The Schmittian Legacy in International Law
12. Hannah Arendt and International Legal Theory
13. Imperialism and International Legal Theory
14. International Legal Theory in Russia: A Civilizational Perspective, or Can Individiuals be Subjects of International Law?
PART III: APPROACHES
15. Natural Law in International Legal Theory: Linear and Dialectical Presentations
16. Hermeneutics of International law
17. Marxist Theories of International Law
18. Realist Approaches to International Law
19. Constructivist Approaches to International Law
20. International Law and the Visual: The International Signs Law
21. Moral Philosophy and International Law
22. International Legal Positivism
23. Yale's Policy Science and International Law
24. Global Administravie Law
25. International Law and Economics
26. Liberal Internationalism
27. Kant, Cosmopolitanism, and International Law
28. Feminist Approaches to International Law
PART IV: DOCTRINES
29. Towards a New Theory of Sources in International Law
30. Something To Do With States
31. Theorising Recognition and International Personality
32. Theorising Responsibility in International Law
33. Theorising Jurisdiction
34. Theorising International law and the Resort to Force
35. Theorising International Criminal Law
36. The Laws of War
37. Theorising Human Rights
38. Theorising Transitional Justice: Cashing in the Blue Chips
39. Theorising International Environmental Law
40. Theorising International Law and Development
41. Theorising the Regulation of Global Financial Markets
42. Theorising the Corporation in International Law
43. Theorising International Organisations
44. Theorising Private International Law
45. Theorising International Law and Migration
PART V: DEBATES
46. Religion, Secularism and International Law
47. Explaining and Understanding Compliance with International Law
48. International Law and the Politics of Critique
49. International Law and Progress
50. International Legalism and International Politics
51. Inequality, Emerging Powers, and International Legal Theory
52. Poverty and International Law
53. Fragmentation and Constitutionalisation