The European Tradition in International Law: James Lorimer

James Lorimer and the Character of Sovereigns: The Institutes as 21st Century Treatise

Abstract

<it>In Vienna, Freud is completing his medical degree just as James Lorimer, in Edinburgh, is polishing his</it> Institutes of the Law of Nations. <it>I suppose the overall claim might be that Lorimer’s Institutes represents one sort of unwritten, ‘unwriteable’ textbook for our own time – international law’s uncivilized unconscious speaking to us from the late 19th century. More specifically, and because I am the only Scot writing as part of this symposium, I will begin by placing Lorimer in the cultural and political frame of late 19th-century Scotland. Then I will take a look at the state, or, in particular, the not-quite-fully sovereign state, and the way it preoccupied the late 19th-century legal imagination and continues to do so today, albeit in a more obscure manner. Finally, I will conclude with some thoughts on Lorimer as a 21st-century scholar of war and peace.</it>

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