File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  Links for fulltext
     (May Require Subscription)
Supplementary

Article: A New Foundation for Freedom of Movement in an Age of Sovereign Control: The Liberal Jurisprudence of August Wilhelm Heffter

TitleA New Foundation for Freedom of Movement in an Age of Sovereign Control: The Liberal Jurisprudence of August Wilhelm Heffter
Authors
Issue Date2022
Citation
Law and History Review, 2022, v. 40, p. 63-90 How to Cite?
AbstractThis article addresses how a once influential jurist resolved a potential paradox in liberal thought—between democratic control over borders and transnational rights—as it arose in the mid-nineteenth-century, amid advocacy against authoritarianism and for free trade and movement, on the one hand, and the increasing calling into question of natural law theories that may have best facilitated free movement, on the other. While scholarship has increasingly shown how the boundaries between periods of natural law and positivist hegemony are difficult to distinguish, specific tensions in the mid-nineteenth-century called for an approach that preserved free movement in light of the growing appeal of empiricism and state sovereignty. In this context, August Wilhelm Heffter proposed that states were bound by higher law as a consequence of their free decision to enter international communities: these communities’ purpose, he wrote, bred customary laws facilitating interstate interaction. Heffter’s approximation of “natural” law in a more positivist context and his use of the period’s “customary” logic helps account for his influence not only in periods of free trade and movement’s ascendancy but also the survival of forms of his thought into periods of sovereigntist reaction against them. It therefore holds potential to address what scholarship has termed today’s “liberal paradox” between democracy and migration better than approaches that emphasize a more complete return to natural law.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/314573
ISI Accession Number ID

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorSzabla, CJ-
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-22T05:27:12Z-
dc.date.available2022-07-22T05:27:12Z-
dc.date.issued2022-
dc.identifier.citationLaw and History Review, 2022, v. 40, p. 63-90-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/314573-
dc.description.abstractThis article addresses how a once influential jurist resolved a potential paradox in liberal thought—between democratic control over borders and transnational rights—as it arose in the mid-nineteenth-century, amid advocacy against authoritarianism and for free trade and movement, on the one hand, and the increasing calling into question of natural law theories that may have best facilitated free movement, on the other. While scholarship has increasingly shown how the boundaries between periods of natural law and positivist hegemony are difficult to distinguish, specific tensions in the mid-nineteenth-century called for an approach that preserved free movement in light of the growing appeal of empiricism and state sovereignty. In this context, August Wilhelm Heffter proposed that states were bound by higher law as a consequence of their free decision to enter international communities: these communities’ purpose, he wrote, bred customary laws facilitating interstate interaction. Heffter’s approximation of “natural” law in a more positivist context and his use of the period’s “customary” logic helps account for his influence not only in periods of free trade and movement’s ascendancy but also the survival of forms of his thought into periods of sovereigntist reaction against them. It therefore holds potential to address what scholarship has termed today’s “liberal paradox” between democracy and migration better than approaches that emphasize a more complete return to natural law.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofLaw and History Review-
dc.titleA New Foundation for Freedom of Movement in an Age of Sovereign Control: The Liberal Jurisprudence of August Wilhelm Heffter-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.identifier.emailSzabla, CJ: cszabla@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/S0738248021000596-
dc.identifier.hkuros334463-
dc.identifier.volume40-
dc.identifier.spage63-
dc.identifier.epage90-
dc.identifier.isiWOS:000776562200005-

Export via OAI-PMH Interface in XML Formats


OR


Export to Other Non-XML Formats