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The United Kingdom and International Law: Contemporary Challenges and Opportunities

Edited by: Michael Lane, Nina M. Hart, Dane Luo

ISBN13: 9781041196419
To be Published: September 2026
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £155.00





Brexit, international conflicts and the migrant crisis are among recent events that have tested the UK’s relationship with international law. They, alongside the UK’s structural approach to international law at the national and devolved levels, have revealed a complex and evolving relationship with international law that has manifested itself in many forms ranging from the rhetoric of ‘Global Britain’ to withdrawal from international treaties. Against this backdrop, this collection brings together experts in academia, legal practice, and policymaking to interrogate the UK’s multi-dimensional relationship with international law. Its aim is to generate reflection on this relationship by placing these dimensions in dialogue with each other. More precisely, it distils this relationship into two lenses and three themes that define the ways in which the United Kingdom interacts with international law. The two lenses capture the UK’s bi-directional, or internal and external, relationship with international law, while the three themes focus on specific aspects of the UK’s role in relation to international law: namely, the UK’s role as a receiver, shaper, and actor obliged to comply with international law. This collection is a must-read for academics, lawyers, students and policymakers alike.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
Foreword
The Rt Hon Lord Mance
Preface
Introduction
Nina M Hart, Michael Lane and Dane Luo

Part One: The Reception and Implementation of International Law in the United Kingdom
Common Law Jurisdictional Hooks to Assess Compliance with Unincorporated International Treaties: An Impermissible Approach
Dane Luo and Gabriel Tan
The United Kingdom's Reception of International Human Rights Norms and Its Status as a Liberal Democracy
Christine Bicknell
Refugee Policies in Transition: Investigating the Impact of International Law on the UK Government's Recent Approaches to Asylum and Protection
Jobair Alam and Md. Naimul Hasan
The ECHR: A Limitation on Parliamentary Sovereignty or a Protective Tool for Our Rights?
Kelly Rowney
The Law of Treaty Withdrawal in the United Kingdom: The Case for Closing the Gaps
Frederick Cowell

Part Two: Regional Reception of International Law
Northern Ireland's Agency in International Law
Kathryn McNeilly and Aoife O'Donoghue
International Law at the Senedd
Sara Moran
Incorporating International Human Rights Law in Scotland
Erin Ferguson

Part Three: The United Kingdom's Contributions to International Law and Its Responses to Contemporary Global
Problems
The United Kingdom and Unilateral Export Controls: Managing Great Power Competition, the Trade-Security Nexus, and International Law
Nina M Hart
The UK Approach to the Regulation of Artificial Intelligence Enabled Military Systems: Diluting the Level of Required Human Oversight
Elliot Winter
We're All in This Together: International Environmental Law in Post-Brexit Britain
James Harrison
Commerce and the Crown: A Measure for Measures of Immunity
Gopal Subramanium and Ankit Malhotra
"As British.. as Fish and Chips"? Just How Committed Is the UK to the Rule of Law When It Comes to International Law and Norms?
Chris Monaghan
Conclusion
Nina M Hart, Dane Luo and Michael Lane