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This volume presents the first systematic account of Japanese international legal theory; edited by Japanese scholars, the volume traces thirteen influential scholars and spans over a century. It examines how theorists positioned outside international law's Western centre developed sophisticated frameworks to address tensions between Western modernity and their own experiences.
The book's central contribution proposes 'conversation'--continuous engagement that respects differences between legal traditions--as an alternative to 'dialogue', which often reproduces existing hierarchies by assuming all perspectives can be reconciled. Through detailed intellectual biographies across six historical periods, contributors reveal how Japanese scholars strategically employed legal positivism, articulated transcivilizational perspectives, and developed concepts of normative multilateralism. Addressed at scholars of international law, legal theory, and comparative legal traditions, this volume demonstrates that the discipline's future requires genuinely reciprocal exchange where diverse perspectives can coexist productively.Maiko Meguro is Research Fellow at Amsterdam Centre for International Law, University of Amsterdam and Lead Coordinator and Senior Policy Analyst of the OECD
Yota Negishi is Professor of Public International Law at Seinan Gakuin University, Fukuoka, JapanThanks for subscribing!
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