In the latter portion of the last lecture I endeavoured to establish 
three propositions, which I hold to be extremely important to the 
intelligent study of International Law. The first of them was that the 
process by which International Law obtained authority in a great part of
 Europe was a late st age of the process by which the Roman Law had also
 obtained authority over very much the saline part of the world. Next, I
 said that this process had little or no analogy to what is now 
understood by legislation, but consisted in the reception of a body of 
doctrine in a mass by specially constituted or trained minds. Lastly, I 
contended that this doctrine, so spread over Europe, consisted mainly of
 that part of the Roman Law which the Romans themselves had called Jus 
Gentium or Jus Naturae -- Law of Nations, or Law of Nature; terms which 
had become practicably convertible. 
The inquiry into the exact meaning of the phrase 'Law of Nature' 
belongs to a different department of juridical study, and I think it 
will be sufficient if I briefly summarise the views, themselves 
considerably condensed, which I published some years ago in a volume 
from which I quoted in the last lecture. Jus Gentium, or Law of Nations,
 had not, so I thought, much colour at first of the meaning which it 
afterwards acquired. It was probably, I said, half as a measure of 
police, and half in furtherance of commerce, that jurisdiction was first
 assumed in disputes in which either foreigners, or a native and a 
foreigner, were concerned. In order to obtain some principles upon which
 the questions to be adjudicated on could be settled, the Roman praetor 
peregrinus resorted to the expedient of selecting the rules of law 
common to Rome and to the different Italian communities in which the 
immigrants were born. In other words, he set himself to form a system 
answering to the primitive and literal meaning of Jus Gentium, that is 
law common to all nations. Jus Gentium was in fact the sum of the common
 ingredients in the customs of the old Italian tribes. It was 
accordingly a collection of rules and principles determined by 
observation to be common to the institutions which prevailed among the 
various Italian races. Now, it is to be remembered that every Roman of 
position who followed public life was in the course of his official 
career not only, so far as his powers went, a statesman, but specially a
 general and a judge. Speculation upon legal principles manifestly 
became common among the Roman aristocracy, and in course of time the 
question suggested itself what was the essential nature of this Jus 
Gentium which had at first very possibly been regarded as a mere market 
law. The answer was shaped by the Greek philosophy, which was a 
favourite subject of study among the class to which the Roman lawyers 
belonged. Seen in the light of Stoical doctrine the Law of Nations came 
to be identified with the Law of Nature; that is to say, with a number 
of supposed principles of conduct which man in society obeys simply 
because he is man. Thus the Law of Nature is simply the Law of Nations 
seen in the light of a peculiar theory. A passage in the Roman 
Institutes shows that the expressions were practically convertible. The 
greatest function of the Law of Nature was discharged in giving birth to
 modern International Law and the modern Law of War. 
I ought to observe that in this account of the matter probably one 
correction has to be made. Some acute scholars have examined the 
authorities since I wrote, and they are inclined to think that very 
anciently there are some instances of the use of Jus Gentium in a wider 
and something like its modern sense; that is, law binding on tribes and 
nations as such. Granting that this is so, still the impression that the
 Roman Law contained a system of what would now be called International 
Law, and that this system was identical with the Law of Nature, had 
undoubtedly much influence in causing the rules of what the Romans 
called Natural Law to be engrafted on, and identified with, the modern 
law of nations. When the older Roman sense of the words died out cannot 
be confidently ascertained, though of course in a world which was 
divided between two great rival sovereigns, the Roman Emperor and the 
King of Persia, there was little room for Law of Nations in the true 
sense of the words. 
When, however, at what period, did this Jus Gentium or Jus Natural 
rise into the dignity which the Roman lawyers give to it? There is a 
strong probability that this exaltation was not very ancient, but that 
it took place during the period, roughly about three hundred years, 
covered by the so-called Roman Peace. That Peace extended from the time 
at which the Roman Empire was settled by the success of Augustus over 
all his enemies to the early years of the third century. The Roman Law 
transformed a large number of the ideas of a great portion of the world;
 but its own transformation from a technical to a plastic system was one
 of the results of the so-called Roman Peace. If we want to know what 
war is, we should study what peace is, and see what the human mind is 
when it is unaffected by war. We should study the Korean Peace, during 
which the existing legal conception of the relation of the sexes framed 
itself; during which the Christian Church was organised, and during 
which the old Law of Nations or Nature transformed itself into an ideal 
system specially distinguished by simplicity and symmetry, and became a 
standard for the legal institutions of all systems of jurisprudence. 
The second proposition for which I argued is one of very considerable
 importance. It was that the Law of Nations, as framed by the jurists 
who were its authors, spread over the world not by legislation, but by a
 process of earlier date. On the appreciation of this position depends 
not only the view taken of the Law of Nature and of the application of 
International Law, but also certain practical consequences which nay be 
momentous; and at a quite recent date our country was in danger of 
adopting an opinion which would have separated it from the rest of the 
civilised world, and from which it could only be saved by correct ideas 
on this very point. 
In order that you may convince yourselves what might be the 
consequences of demanding a legislative sanction, or a sanction derived 
from an authority on a level with that of a modern legislature, for the 
rules of International Law, I recommend you to compare the view of it 
taken by the statesmen and jurists of the United States of America with 
that to which this country might have committed itself; and from which 
it was delivered by the direct intervention of Parliament. The United 
States are particularly worth examining in regard to the point before 
us, because they were an instance of a new nation deliberately setting 
itself to consider that new obligations it had incurred by determining 
to take rank as a state. Italy is another and a later example, and there
 have been some others in South America, but all these societies, made 
up from smaller pre-existing territorial materials, were greatly 
influenced by the example of the American Federal Union. The doctrines 
which the United States adopted may be gathered from some very valuable 
volumes which the American Government has quite recently caused to be 
published, and to which I will presently call your attention. The 
systematic American writers on International Law are less instructive on
 the points which I am going to place before you than these books, 
because they usually follow the order of topics taken up by older 
European writers. But I will quote a passage from one of the most 
careful and sober of writers, Chancellor Kent, and also from a writer 
who unhappily died the other day, and whose productions were much valued
 in the United States -- Mr. Pomeroy. You will have to recollect that 
the question at issue between the English and Americans lawyers was less
 what is the nature of International Law, and how it arose, than the 
question how, and to what extent, have its rules become binding on 
independent states. These questions are often confounded together, or 
found to be indissoluble, as will be plain from the extracts which I am 
about to read. 
There has been a difference of opinion among, writers concerning the 
foundation of the Law of Nations. It has been considered by some as a 
mere system of positive institutions, founded upon consent and usage; 
While others have insisted that it was essentially the same as the Law 
of Nature, applied to the conduct of nations, in the character of moral 
persons, susceptible of obligations and laws. We are not to adopt either
 of these theories as exclusively true. The most useful and practical 
part of the Law of Nations is, no doubt, instituted or positive law, 
founded on usage, consent, and agreement. But it would be improper to 
separate this law entirely from natural jurisprudence, and not to 
consider it as deriving much of its force and dignity from the same 
principles of right reason, the same views of the nature and 
constitution of man, and the same sanction of Divine revelation, as 
those from which the science of morality is deduced. There is a natural 
and a positive Law of Nations. By the former, every state, in its 
relations with other states, is bound to conduct itself with justice, 
good faith, and benevolence; and this application of the Law of Nature 
has been called by Vattel the necessary Law of Nations, because nations 
are bound by the Law of Nature to observe it; and it is termed by others
 the internal Law of Nations, because it is obligatory upon them in 
point of conscience. We ought not, therefore, to separate the science of
 public law from that of ethics, nor encourage the dangerous suggestion 
that governments are not so strictly bound by the obligations of truth, 
justice, and humanity, in relation to other powers, as they are in the 
management of their own local concerns. 
States, or bodies politic, are to be considered as moral persons, 
having a public will, capable and free to do right and wrong, inasmuch 
as they are collections of individuals, each of whom carries with him 
into the service of the community the same binding law of morality and 
religion which ought to control his conduct in private life. The Law of 
Nations is a complex system, composed of various ingredients. It 
consists of general principles of right and justice, equally suitable to
 the government of individuals in a state of natural equality, and to 
the relations and conduct of nations; of a collection of usages, 
customs, and opinions, the growth of civilization and commerce; and of a
 code of positive law. 
In the absence of these latter regulations, the intercourse and 
conduct of nations are to be governed her principles fairly to deduced 
from the rights and duties of nations, and the nature of moral 
obligation; and we have the authority of the lawyers of antiquity, and 
of some of the first masters in the modern school of public law, for 
placing the moral obligation of nations and of individuals on similar 
grounds, and for considering individual and national morality as parts 
of one and the same science. The Law of Nations, so far as it is founded
 on the principles of Natural Law, is equally binding in every age and 
upon all mankind. But the Christian nations of Europe, and their 
descendants on this side of the Atlantic, by the vast superiority of 
their attainments in arts, and science, and commerce, as well as in 
policy and government; and. above all, by the brighter light, the more 
certain truths, and the more definite sanction which Christianity has 
communicated to the ethical jurisprudence of the ancients, have 
established a Law of Nations peculiar to themselves. They form together a
 community of nations united by religion, manners, morals, humanity, and
 science, and united also by the mutual advantages of commercial 
intercourse, by the habit of forming alliances and treaties with each 
other, of interchanging ambassadors, and of studying and recognising the
 same writers and systems of public law. 
This Jus Gentium of the Imperial jurisconsults is identical with the 
Law of Nature, or Natural Law, of many modern ethical and juridical 
writers; and both are, in fact, the law of God, made known somewhat 
dimly to the whole human race at all times, and set forth with 
unmistakable certainty and transcendent power in His revealed will. This
 is, in truth, the highest law by which moral beings can be governed; 
highest in its Lawgiver, who is omnipotent over each individual man, as 
well as over societies and states; highest in the absolute perfection of
 the rules which it contains; highest in the absolute cogency of the 
commands which it utters; highest in the absolute obligation of the 
duties which it enforces; highest in the absolute certainty and 
irresistible coercive power of the sanctions which it wields, and which 
operate upon the deepest spiritual nature of every human being. 
It must be clear to you, I think, that writers who adhere to these 
opinions are not likely to trouble themselves greatly with the question 
of the original obligatory force of International Law. If the Law of 
Nations be binding on states considered as moral beings on account of 
its derivation from the Law of Nature or of God, states when in a 
healthy moral condition will defer to them as individual men do to the 
morality of the Ten Commandments. The whole question in fact, as laid 
down by liens, and with less moderation by Pomeroy, is a question of 
ethics, and all demand of a legislative sanction may be discarded. But 
now let us turn to the four volumes of the American International Digest
 edited by Dr. Francis Wharton. It is entitled, 'A Digest of the 
International Law of the United States,' and it consists of documents 
relating to that subject issued by Presidents and Secretaries of State, 
of the decisions of Federal Courts, and of the opinions of 
Attorneys-General. Among the propositions laid down in these volumes you
 will find the following, all of them accepted by the American Federal 
Government. 
'The law of the United States ought not, if it be avoidable, so to be
 construed as to infringe on the common principles and usages of nations
 and the general doctrines of International Law. Even as to municipal 
matters the law should be so construed as to conform to the Law of 
Nations, unless the contrary be expressly prescribed. An Act of the 
Federal Congress ought never to be construed so as to violate the Law of
 Nations if any other possible construction remains, nor should it be 
construed to violate neutral rights or to affect neutral commerce, 
further than is warranted by the Law of Nations as understood in this 
country.' Again: 'The Law of Nations is part of the Municipal Law of 
separate states. The intercourse of the United States with foreign 
nations and the policy in regard to them being placed by the 
Constitution in the hands of the Federal Government, its decisions upon 
these subjects are by universally acknowledged principles of 
International Law obligatory on everybody. The Law of Nations, unlike 
foreign Municipal Law, does not have to be proved as a fact. The Law of 
Nations makes en integral part of the laws of the land. Every nation, on
 being received at her own request into the circle of civilised 
government, must understand that she not only attains rights of 
sovereignty and the dignity of national character, but that she binds 
herself also to the strict and faithful observance of all those 
principles, laws, and usages which have obtained currency amongst 
civilised states, and which have for their object the mitigation of the 
miseries of war. International Law is founded upon natural reason and 
justice, the opinions of writers of known wisdom, and the practice of 
civilised nations.' 
Here you see that according to American doctrine International Law 
has precedence both of Federal and of Municipal Law, unless in the 
exceptional case where Federal Law has deliberately departed from it. It
 is regarded by the American lawyers as having very much the same 
relation to Federal and State Law as the Federal Constitution has, and 
this no doubt is the reason why in so many famous American law books 
Constitutional Law and International Law are the first subjects 
discussed, International Law on the whole having precedence of 
Constitutional Law. 
The principle on which these American doctrines of International Law 
repose is, I think, tolerably plain. The statesmen and jurists of the 
United States do not regard International Law as having become binding 
on their country through the intervention of any legislature. They do 
not believe it to be of the nature of immemorial usage, 'of which the 
memory of man runneth not to the contrary.' They look upon its rules as a
 main part of the conditions on which a state is originally received 
into the family of civilised nations. This view, though not quite 
explicitly set forth, does not really differ from that entertained by 
the founders of International Law, and it is practically that submitted 
to, and assumed to be a sufficiently solid basis for further inferences,
 by Governments and lawyers of the civilised sovereign communities of 
our day. If they put it in another way it would probably be that the 
state which disclaims the authority of International Law places herself 
outside the circle of civilised nations. 
There is, however, one community which on one occasion went near to 
dissenting from the American opinion and from the assumptions which it 
involves. This was our own country, Great Britain. In one celebrated 
case, only the other day, the English judges, though by a majority of 
one only, forged their decision on a very different principle, and a 
special Act of Parliament was required to re-establish the authority of 
International Law on the footing on which the rest of the world had 
placed it. The case was one of great importance and interest, and it was
 argued before all the English judges in the Court of Criminal Appeal. 
It is known as the Queen v. Keyn, but is more popularly called the 
'Franconia' Case (2 Ex. Div. 63). The 'Franconia,' a German ship, was 
commanded by a German subject, Keyn. On a voyage from Hamburg to the 
West Indies, when within two and a half miles from the beach at Dover, 
and less than two miles from the head of the Admiralty pier, the 
'Franconia,' through the negligence, as the jury found, of Keyn, ran 
into the British ship 'Strathclyde,' sank her, and caused the death of 
one of her passengers. Keyn was tried for manslaughter, and was 
convicted at the Central Criminal Court; but the question then arose 
whether he had committed an offence within the jurisdiction of English 
tribunals. 
The point on which that question turned was this. All the writers on 
International Law agree that some portion of the coast water of a 
country is considered for some purposes to belong to the country the 
coasts of which it washes. There is some difference of opinion between 
them as to the exact point to which this territorial water, which is 
considered as part of a country's soil, extends. This doctrine, however,
 if it were sound, must at some time or other have been borrowed by the 
English courts and lawyers from international authority. Previous to the
 appearance of International Law, the law followed in England was 
different. The great naval judicial authority was then the Admiral of 
England, whose jurisdiction was over all British subjects and other 
persons on board British ships on the high seas. If the doctrine of the 
international jurists prevailed, a change must, at some time or other, 
have taken place in the law, and the point arose as to whether any such 
change could be presumed, and by what agency it could have been 
effected. The judges were very nearly equally divided on the point, 
which is a fundamental one affecting the whole view to be taken of the 
authority of International Law in this country. In the end it was 
decided by the majority of the judges that no sufficient authority was 
given for the reception in this country of the so-called International 
doctrine; but there was no question that this doctrine was the doctrine 
of the majority of states, and the inconvenience of having one rule for 
England and another for the rest of the civilised world was palpably so 
great that Parliament finally stepped in, and in the year 1878 passed 
what is called the 'Territorial Waters Act,' by which the jurisdiction 
of the English Courts which had succeeded to the jurisdiction of the 
Admiral of England was declared to extend according to the International
 rule to three miles from the coast line of England. In the course of 
the judgments which were given, which are extremely learned, curious, 
and interesting, Lord Coleridge. who was with the minority of the 
judges, used the following language: 
'My brothers Brett and Lindley have shown that by a consensus of 
writers, without one single authority to the contrary, some portion of 
the coast waters of a country is considered for some purposes to belong 
to the country the coasts of which they wash. I concur in thinking that 
the discrepancies to be found in these writers as to the precise extent 
of the coast waters which belong to a country discrepancies, after all, 
not serious since the time at least of Grotius are not material in this 
question; because they all agree in the principle that the waters, to 
some point beyond low-water mark, belong to the respective countries on 
grounds of sense if not of necessity, belong to them as territory in 
sovereignty, or property, exclusively, so that the authority of France 
or Spain, of Holland or England, is the only authority recognised over 
the coast Raters which adjoin these countries. This is established as 
solidly as by the very nature of the case any proposition of 
International Law can be. Strictly speaking, "International Law " is an 
inexact expression, and it is apt to mislead if its inexactness is not 
kept in mind. Law implies a lawgiver, and a tribunal capable of 
enforcing it and coercing its transgressors. But there is no common 
lawgiver to sovereign states; and no tribunal has the power to bind them
 by decrees or coerce them if they transgress. The Law of Nations is 
that collection of usages which civilised states have agreed to observe 
in their dealings with one another. What these usages are, whether a 
particular one has or has not been agreed to, must be matter of 
evidence. Treaties and acts of state are but evidence of the agreement 
of nations, and do not in this country at least per se bind the 
tribunals. Neither, certainly, does a consensus of jurists; but it is 
evidence of the agreement of nations on international points; and on 
such points, when they arise, the English Courts give effect, as part of
 English law, to such agreement' (p. 153). 
Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, on the other hand, after discussing at 
length the views of thirty writers of different countries and commenting
 on the difference between them, goes on to remark: 'Can a portion of 
that which was before high sea have been converted into British 
territory without any action on the part of the British Government or 
Legislature -- by the mere assertions of writers on public law -- or 
even by the assent of other nations? And when in support of this 
position, or of the theory of the three-mile zone in general, the 
statements of the writers on International Law are relied on, the 
question may well be asked, upon what authority are these statements 
founded? When and in what manner have the nations, who are to be 
affected by such a rule as these writers, following one another, have 
laid down, signified their assent to it? -- to say nothing of the 
difficulty which might be found in saying to which of these conflicting 
opinions such assent had been given' (p. 202). 
It would appear, therefore, from the authorities which I have cited 
that in the two great English-speaking people of the world, one 
descended from the other, there prevail two, and possibly three, 
opinions as to the obligatory force of International Law on individual 
states. The lawyers and statesmen of the United States of America regard
 the acknowledgment of and submission to the international system as 
duties which devolve on every independent sovereignty through the fact 
of its being admitted into the circle of civilized Governments. Among 
the English judges, Lord Coleridge considers that the assent of a nation
 is necessary to subject it to International Law, but that in the case 
of Great Britain and all the other civilised European Powers this assent
 has been given either by express action or declaration, or at all 
events by non-dissent. Lastly, Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, while 
accepting the view that International Law became binding on states by 
their assent to it, manifestly thought that this assent must somehow be 
conveyed by the acquiescing state in its sovereign character, through 
some public action which its Constitution recognizes as legally 
qualified to adopt a new law or a new legal doctrine; that is, in Great 
Britain by Act of Parliament or by the formal declaration of a Court of 
Justice. The two opinions which I first mentioned, that over and over 
again propounded in the American Digest and that of Lord Coleridge, 
though the language used is somewhat inexact and in one case too 
metaphorical, seem to me to express the doctrine of the whole civilised 
world outside Great Britain, and to conform to the historical 
explanation which I will presently place before you. On the other hand, 
the opinion of Lord Chief Justice Cockburn, which is one to which 
English judges, always busily occupied in interpreting and applying the 
laws of this country, are naturally liable, would have caused the 
greatest inconvenience if it had been declared to be part of the law of 
England. It practically is that the international rules could only have 
been imported into our system by one of the modern processes by which 
our institutions are changed. In that case each separate alleged rule of
 International Law would have had to be shown to have been engrafted on 
our legal system by the legislation of Parliament, by the alternative 
legislation, within certain limits, of the English Courts, or by the 
conformity of the rule with some provable usage. For a simple rule a 
most complicated rule would have been substituted. 
The point immediately before the English Court of Criminal Appeal can
 never arise again since the passing of the Territorial Waters Act; but 
it is conceivable, if not likely, that we have not heard the last of the
 more general question of principle. I may say that it seems to me that 
the solution of the difficulty can only be supplied by the historical 
method. As I have asserted many times, these systems of law have not 
always been extended over the countries in which they are found 
prevailing by what we call legislation. In more ancient times, and to a 
great extent even at this day, in that Eastern portion of the world in 
which so much of the usages of earlier mankind still survive, systems of
 religion and systems of morals, generally drawing with them some system
 of laws, gain currency by their own moral influence; certain minds 
being naturally predisposed to recede them acquiesce in them even with 
enthusiasm. Mr. Justice Stephen, in the controversial work which he 
calls 'Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity,' has an eloquent passage on 
the subject. 'The sources of religion lie hid from us. All that we know 
is, that now and again in the course of ages some one sets to music the 
tune which is haunting millions of ears. It is caught up here and there,
 and repeated till the chorus is thundered out by a body of singers able
 to drown all discords and to force the vast unmusical mass to listen to
 them. Such results as these come not by observation, but when they do 
come they carry away as with a flood and hurry in their own direction 
all the laws and customs of those whom they affect.' What is here said 
of religion, is true to a certain extent of morality. In the East a body
 of new moral ideas is sure in time to produce a string of legal rules; 
and it is said by those who know India and its natives well that the 
production of what for want of a better name we must call a Code is a 
favourite occupation with learned and active minds, though of course in a
 country which nowadays follows to a great extent the morality (though 
not the faith) of Christian Europe, and receives new laws from a 
regularly constituted Legislature, the enthusiasm for new moral 
doctrines is ever growing feebler and the demand for legal rules 
accommodated to them is becoming less. Now, International Law was a Code
 in the same sense in which many Eastern collections of rules were 
Codes. It was founded on a new morality, that which had been discovered 
in the supposed Law of Nature, and in some minds it excited unbounded 
enthusiasm. 
The same process had previously been followed in Europe as regards 
Roman Civil Law. We may not quite understand the admiration which the 
technical part of the Roman Law inspired, but of the fact there is no 
doubt. This process by which laws extended themselves had not quite died
 out when the international jurists appeared, and in point of fact their
 system of rules was received by the world very much as a system of law 
founded on morals is received to this day in the East. No doubt it fell 
on soil prepared for it. The literate classes, the scholars, great parts
 of the clergy, and the sovereigns and statesmen of Europe accepted it, 
and the result was an instant decay of the worst atrocities of war. 
Indeed, it is only necessary to look at the earliest authorities on 
International Law, in the 'De Jure Belli et Pacis' of Grotius for 
example, to see that the Law of Nations is essentially a moral and, to 
some extent a religious, system. The appeal of Grotius is almost as 
frequent to morals and religion as to precedent, and no doubt it is 
these portions of the book, which to us have become almost commonplace 
or which seem irrelevant, which gained for it much of the authority 
which it ultimately obtained. 
The bulk of these lectures will consist of an account, as summary as I
 can make it, of such portions of the International system as appear to 
me to be reasonably settled; but before I proceed to this portion of my 
course, I think I ought to say something on some modern criticisms of 
the basis of International Law which have made their appearance quite 
recently, and which I think have a tendency to multiply. The criticisms 
to which I refer appear to me to be a singular proof of the great 
authority which in our day has been obtained by the treatise of John 
Austin on the Province of Jurisprudence. They are in fact to a 
considerable extent a re-statement of his positions. The scope of 
Austin's undertaking in this classical work is often nowadays 
exaggerated. He attempted, by analysis of the various conceptions which 
law in its various senses includes, to select one sense of law in which 
legal generalizations were possible. His ultimate object appears to have
 been to effect a scientific rearrangement of law as a Code. Little 
unfortunately has been done at present, save perhaps in the German 
Empire and in India, to carry out this object; but no doubt Austin did 
do something towards the ultimate codification of positive law by 
confining his investigation to the various subordinate conceptions which
 make up law as so understood. As probably many of you know, his 
fundamental assertion is that in every country there is some portion of 
the community which can force the rest to do exactly what it pleases. 
This is called by him the 'Sovereign,' a word on which it is necessary 
as soon as possible to observe that it is here taken in a different 
sense from that in which it is employed by the classical writers on 
International Law. From Austin's point of view International Law 
resembled morality more than law; it was chiefly enforced by 
disapprobation of acts committed in violation of it; it could not be 
resolved into the command of any sovereign. 
In my next lecture, I shall contrast this word 'Sovereignty' as used 
by Austin and the so-called school of analytical jurists with its use in
 International Law, and specially consider the rights over land and 
water which are asserted by international lawyers to arise logically 
from the conception of Sovereignty. 
In my first lecture I spoke of the criticisms on International Law 
conducted by John Austin in his 'Province of Jurisprudence Determined' 
as very interesting and quite innocuous; but the results are sometimes 
so stated as if they showed that Austin had intended to diminish, and 
had succeeded in diminishing, the dignity or imperative force of 
International Law. An observation here must be made that one sense of 
law is just as good and dignified as another, if it be only consistently
 used. In philosophy the commonest sense of law is that in which it is 
used by such writers as the author of the book called 'The Reign of 
Law.' No term can be more dignified or more valuable than 'law' as thus 
employed. What we have to do, is to keep this meaning of law separate in
 our minds from law in other senses. It is very convenient, when the 
main subject of thought is positive law, that we should remember that 
International Law has but slender connection with it, and that it has 
less analogy to the laws which are the commands of sovereigns than to 
rules of conduct, which, whatever be their origin, are to a very great 
extent enforced by the disapprobation which attends their neglect. What 
is most important to recollect are the points of collection which do 
exist between International Law and positive law. 
Here one cannot but remark that a serious mistake as to human nature 
is becoming common in our day. Austin resolved law into the command of a
 sovereign addressed to a subject, and always enforced by a sanction or 
penalty which created an imperative duty. The most important ingredient 
brought out by this analysis is the sanction. Austin has shown, though 
not without some straining of language, that the sanction is found 
everywhere in positive law, civil and criminal. This is, in fact, the 
great feat which he performed, but some of his disciples seem to me to 
draw the inference from his language that men always obey rules from 
fear of punishment. As a matter of fact this is quite untrue, for the 
largest number of rules which men obey are obeyed unconsciously from a 
mere habit of mind. Men do sometimes obey rules for fear of the 
punishment which will be indicted if they are violated, but, compared 
with the mass of men in each community, this class is but small -- 
probably, it is substantially confined to what are called the criminal 
classes -- and for one man who refrains from stealing or murdering 
because he fears the penalty there must be hundreds or thousands who 
refrain without a thought on the subject. A vast variety of causes may 
have produced this habit of mind. Early teaching certainly has a great 
deal to do with it; religious opinion has a great deal to do with it; 
and it is very possible, and indeed probable, that in a vast number of 
cases it is an inherited sentiment springing from the enforcement of law
 by states, and the organs of states, during long ages. Unfortunately it
 has been shown in our day that the mental habit, so far as regards 
positive civil and criminal law, may be easily destroyed by connivance 
at violations of rule; and this is some evidence of its having a long 
descent from penal law once sternly enforced. 
What we have to notice is, that the founders of International Law, 
though they did not create a sanction, created a law-abiding sentiment. 
They diffused among sovereigns, and the literate classes in communities,
 a strong repugnance to the neglect or breach of certain rules 
regulating the relations and actions of states. They did this, not by 
threatening punishments, but by the alternative and older method, long 
known in Europe and Asia, of creating a strong approval of a certain 
body of rules. It is quite true that some of the reasons given by 
Grotius for International Law would not now commend themselves if they 
were presented to the mind for the first time; but it does not do to 
look too far back into the origins of law for the reasons of its 
establishment. Much of the beginnings of English Law is to be found in 
the Year Books; but it would not be too harsh to say that some of the 
reasons given for rules now received, which are to be found in the Year 
Books, are mixed with a great deal of sheer nonsense. The original 
reasons for the International rules are possibly to some extent 
nonsense: they often seem to us commonplace, they are often rhetorical, 
they are often entangled with obsolete theories of morals or deductions 
from irrelevant precedents, and on the other hand they often assume a 
power of discerning what the Divine pleasure is on a particular subject 
which the ideas of the present day would not admit. As to their 
expediency, that has to be decided by experience, and experience has, on
 the whole, pronounced decisively in their favour. 
There are, however, at the same time some real defects in 
International Law which are traceable to the difference between that law
 and positive law, and the absence of mechanism by which positive law is
 developed. International Law was not declared by a Legislature, and it 
still suffers from want of a regular Legislature to improve and to 
develop it. It is still developed by the antiquated method of writer 
commenting on writer, no security being nowadays taken for the 
competence or authority of the writer except vague opinion. There are 
really writers who through confusedness, or through natural prejudice, 
are open to the implied censure of Dr. Whewell that they have rather 
encouraged than diminished the risk and the evils of war. International 
Law suffers also from the absence of any method of authoritatively 
declaring its tenor on some of its branches, and above all from the 
absence of any method of enforcing its rules short of war or fear of 
war. All these are real and often formidable drawbacks on the usefulness
 of International Law,and no teacher of International Law can neglect 
them. Before the end of this course, though not quite immediately, I 
propose to examine them, and to consider whether the grooving experience
 of civilised mankind points to any new remedies or better means of 
enforcing old ones.
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/int02.asp 
Sunday, June 23, 2013
INTERNATIONAL LAW : LECTURE II. ITS AUTHORITY AND SANCTION.
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