Derecho internacional y sociedad global : ¿ha cambiado la naturaleza del orden jurídico internacional?

Authors

  • Francisco Orrego Vicuña Profesor, Instituto de Estudios Internacionales, Universidad de Chile

Abstract

Modern international law has entered the fifth century of its evolution, characterized by a constant transformation of the content and modalities of the legal order. The international society that we know today, and the one we can perceive in the future, is also very different from that which characterized seventeenth century Europe and the transformations that took place up to and including the twentieth century. We are, undoubtedly, before a global society. The question that remains, however, is whether the nature of the international legal order that governs that society has fundamentally changed or whether we are facing a process of gradual transformation within certain principles that remain substantially unchanged. It is the issue of the limits and opportunities that international law finds in global society.

Keywords:

International Law, Global Society, International Legal Order, International Society, Transformation and Continuity

Author Biography

Francisco Orrego Vicuña, Profesor, Instituto de Estudios Internacionales, Universidad de Chile

Abogado; profesor titular de la Universidad de Chile; doctor en derecho internacional, The London School of Economics and Political Science, Universidad de Londres; profesor visitante de diversas universidades extranjeras; presidente del Tribunal Administrativo del Banco Mundial; Premio Nacional de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales 2002; miembro del Institut de Droit International.