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The volume is the result of intense scientific work, also discussed during a specially constituted workshop organised at the European University Institute, together with Roma Tre University. The reflection of the dynamism of international law in Italy is clearly visible in the structure of the volume, which offers an intertwined binary vision of the theory and practice of the discipline.
Auteur
Giulio Bartolini is associate professor of International Law at the Department of Law, Roma Tre University. He is editor-in-chief of the 'Yearbook of International Disaster Law' (Brill) and managing editor of the bilingual e-journal 'Questions of International Law/Questions de droit international'.
Texte du rabat
This volume provides a comprehensive, innovative, and critical analysis of the development and impact of international law in Italy. Through its scholars and due to political and historical events, Italy has contributed significantly to the formation and definition of international law and its academic community.
Contenu
Introduction
1: Giulio Bartolini: What a History of International Law in Italy is for: International Law through the Prism of National Perspectives
Part 1: The Development of International Law Scholarship in Italy
2.: Claudia Storti: Early "Italian" Scholars of Ius gentium
3.: Walter Rech: International Law as a Political Language, 1600-1859
4.: Edoardo Greppi: The Risorgimento and the "Birth" of International Law in Italy
5.: Eloisa Mura: The Construction of the International Law Discipline in Italy between the Mancinian and Positive Schools
6.: Giulio Bartolini: The Italian Legal Scholarships in the Early Decades of the Twentieth Century
7.: Antonello Tancredi: The (Immediate) Post-II World War Period
8.: Ivan Ingravallo: The Formation of International Law Journals in Italy: Their Role in the Discipline
9.: Mirko Sossai: Catholicism and the Evolution of International Law Studies in Italy
10.: Lorenzo Gradoni: Burn Out and Fade Away: Marxism in Italian International Legal Scholarship
11.: Pietro Franzina: The Integrated Approach to Private and Public International Law - A Distinctive Feature of Italian Legal Thinking
Part 2: Key Historical and Political Events and Their Impact on the Italian Scholarship of International Law
12.: Sergio Marchisio: The Unification of Italy and International Law
13.: Tommaso Di Ruzza: The "Roman Question": The Dissolution of the Papal State, the Creation of the Vatican City State and the Debate on the International Legal Personality of the Holy See
14.: Tullio Scovazzi: The Italian Approach to Colonialism: The First Experiences in Eritrea and Somalia
15.: Giulio Bartolini: Italy between the Two World Wars: International Law Issues
16.: Roberto Virzo: The Influx of International Law Scholars in the Constitution-Making Process
17.: Enrico Milano: The Main International Law Issues Arising in the Aftermath of World War II
Conclusions
18.: Giovanni DiStefano and Robert Kolb: Some Contributions and Influence of the Italian Doctrine of International Law
19.: Paolo Palchetti: The Last Decades of the Italian Doctrine