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THINKING BEYOND THE DOMESTIC-INTERNATIONAL DIVIDE: TOWARD A UNIFIED CONCEPT OF PUBLIC LAW

For many years, legal scholars and political scientists have studied domestic public law and international public law as separate subjects, treating them as if they were intrinsically different phenomena.1 This approach is highly institutionalized in the legal and political science academies.2 In law schools there are, of course, separate courses and casebooks for international public law on the one hand and domestic public law topics such as administrative law and constitutional law on the other hand. In political science departments, to the extent law is taught at all, domestic public law is usually taught by American politics scholars,3 and international public law by international ...

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