The European Tradition in International Law : Nicolas Politis

Politis and the Limits of Legal Form

Abstract

Prolific as a scholar, active in the League of Nations, and agent for Greece before the Permanent Court, Nicolas Politis is remembered today as a key figure both in the development of international legal doctrine and in the organization of international political relations. This short article examines three of Politis’ texts – the first an early foray into scholarship dealing with issues arising from the 1897 Greek–Turkish War, the second a set of mid-career lectures at the Hague Academy of International Law, and the third the posthumously published <it>La morale internationale</it>, a work of considerable ambition that never quite managed to find its audience. The article’s chief aim is to demonstrate that Politis’ trajectory was marked by recurring appeals to extra-legal ideas and arguments – a broadly anti-formalistic tendency which made its influence felt with increasing visibility over time, but which was present even in his earliest and most conventional work.

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