'Welcome to Eutopia!' by Philip Allott
Duration: 34 mins 30 secs
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Description: |
The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of aggression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity.
This lecture, entitled 'Welcome to Eutopia!', was delivered at the Lauterpacht Centre on Friday 20th January 2017 by Philip Allott, Professor Emeritus of International Public Law at Cambridge University. |
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Created: | 2017-01-24 12:55 |
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Collection: | LCIL International Law Seminar Series MOVED |
Publisher: | University of Cambridge |
Copyright: | University of Cambridge |
Language: | eng (English) |
Keywords: | International Law; Philosophy; Legal Theory; |
Abstract: | Philip Allott is Professor Emeritus of International Public Law at Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College. He was at one time a legal adviser in the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office. His Eunomia. New Order for a New World (1990/2001) proposed a new general theory of International Law, as the true law of a true international society comprising all human societies and all human beings.
For more, see: http://trin-hosts.trin.cam.ac.uk/fellows/philipallott/ In July last year, he published Eutopia. New Philosophy and New Law for a Troubled World. That book uses the 500th anniversary of Thomas More’s Utopia (1516) as the starting-point for a similar overview of the present and possible future state of the human world, including the human world at the global level. His talk will draw attention to the essential features of this personal summa philosophica. |
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