"Reading The Assault on International Law provides a dramatic insight into the legal, academic, and ultimately - political battles over the place of international law in US domestic law and the US conceptualization of sovereignty. For those with a particular fondness for international law, it reads like a thriller - a pretty good one, for that matter." -- Ralph Janik, Austrian Review of International European Law "A cogently argued and provocative thesis: that the devaluing of international law over the past two decades by a few U.S. law professors, rather than an interesting ivory tower exercise, is directly responsible for some of America's darkest deeds since 9/11." -Sean D. Murphy, Member, U.N.
International Law Commission, and Patricia Roberts Harris Professor of Law, George Washington University "The single most important question in international legal theory today is: are states bound by international law? The right wing 'neo-cons' say no. Jens David Ohlin takes their favorite weapon-rational choice theory-and turns it on them, to great effect. Along the way, he shares his views about the colorful personalities who operate behind the scenes and the prestigious law schools that they inhabit. The Assault on International Law is one book that people on both sides of the dispute must read and deal with." -Lea Brilmayer, Howard Holtzmann Professor of International Law, Yale Law School "Are states capable of functioning as agents? And does their presumptive rationality allow them to make commitments that they can be expected to honor, even when that is not to their immediate advantage? The Assault on International Law documents and challenges a new wave of theory that would put the very possibility of a robust regime of international law in question. The debate about these issues ought to occupy center stage in the theory of international relations, and this book ought to be cast in a leading role." -Philip Pettit, L.S.
Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values, Princeton University, and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Australian National University "'International law,' Jens Ohlin writes, 'is under attack in this country.' And so it is. But Ohlin's riposte in The Assault on International Law is learned, forceful, and profoundly convincing. I can only hope this critically important book receives the attention it deserves, both within and without the academy; if it does, international law should have little trouble surviving the worst its American critics can throw at it." -Kevin Jon Heller, Professor of Criminal Law, SOAS, University of London "Ohlin's analysis is strong. He will persuade some.as he encourages America to embrace established international rules on the use of force and the protection of the rights of individuals." -Philippe Sands QC, Financial Times "Ohlin's book was written at an ideal time.
The popularity of arguments in favour of disregarding international law or human rights obligations in favour of national self-interest has increased in recent years, particularly since 9/11. Ohlin makes the case very well that perceptions of international law do not remain divorced from practice and should be taken seriously. By engaging with the New Realists on their own terms, his arguments relating to rational choice theory offer not just a defence to attacks on international law, but a compelling argument that complying with international law is the rational thing to do." -Jaime Gordon, Human Rights Law Review 16:1 "The Assault on International Law makes an important contribution to the theory of international law and offers a powerful rebuttal of the sceptical views articulated by a number of American scholars in the last 15-20 years." -- Guglielmo Verdirame, Netherlands International Law Review.