{"id":85216,"date":"2018-03-06T08:32:00","date_gmt":"2018-03-06T08:32:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2023-01-06T19:59:02","modified_gmt":"2023-01-06T19:59:02","slug":"the-teaching-of-hugo-gratius","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/2018\/03\/06\/the-teaching-of-hugo-gratius\/","title":{"rendered":"The teaching of Hugo Gratius"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px;\" class=\"sharethis-inline-share-buttons\" ><\/div><h1 style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">The teaching of Hugo Gratius<\/h1>\n<pre style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; padding-left: 18px;\">                           Tyumen State University<br \/>                             Faculty of History<br \/>                     International Relations Department<br \/><br \/><br \/>                                 Term paper<br \/><br \/>              \u201cThe teaching of Hugo Gratius of war and peace.\u201d<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>                                                       Done by Denis Brovka,<br \/>                                                        Student of group 984<br \/>                                            Checked by Christopher Goldsmith<br \/><br \/>                                 Tyumen 2000<br \/>Contents.<br \/><br \/>Introduction     3<br \/>Chapter I   4<br \/>Chapter II  7<br \/>Chapter III 12<br \/>Conclusion  15<br \/>Bibliography     16<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>Introduction<br \/><br \/><br \/>   Hugo Gratius, a scientist and a lawyer from Holland, lived from  1583  to<br \/>1645. In his famous treatise \u201cThe Three  Books  on  the  Right  of  War  and<br \/>Peace\u201d, published in 1625, he depicted the struggle  of  the  Dutch  capital<br \/>for freedom at the sea. He is considered to be the founder of the  bourgeois<br \/>studies of the international law and is one of the  representatives  of  the<br \/>big bourgeoisie as a scholar of law at an early  stage  of  its  development<br \/>during the dissolution of feudalism in Western Europe and  the  first  large<br \/>revolt of bourgeoisie.<br \/>   This book by Gratius is more or less a systematical report of  the  basic<br \/>theories of  international  law,  which  were  common  for  that  period  of<br \/>evolution from feudalism to capitalism. It was for a long time  one  of  the<br \/>most important books for diplomats.<br \/>   According to his beliefs, Hugo was a  representative  of  the  period  of<br \/>transformation from feudalist to bourgeois state. His  ideas  received  wide<br \/>spread and founded the basement of further development of the  international<br \/>law, because they expressed real conditions  of  development  and  political<br \/>demands of the newly-forming class  of  bourgeoisie  to  the  ruling  feudal<br \/>party. I must specially note  the  progressive  character  of  some  of  the<br \/>Gratius\u2019s ideas in the sphere of the international law  that  had  a  strong<br \/>influence  to  modern  international  relations.  Hugo  Gratius,   being   a<br \/>bourgeoisie theorist on its early stages,  denied  the  opinion  that  force<br \/>makes all the decisions in the international relations. He thought that  law<br \/>and justice should be number one in international relations\u2026<br \/>   But we must  not  forget  that  the  progressiveness  of  his  ideas  was<br \/>inconsistent and limited by the  narrow  frameworks  of  the  bourgeois  law<br \/>views. It is necessary to note that modern  bourgeois  ideologists  renounce<br \/>the principles  promoted  by  the  ancestors  in  17  \u2013  18  centuries  when<br \/>bourgeoisie was fighting against feudalism.<br \/><br \/>   Chapter I<br \/><br \/><br \/>   Hugo Gratius was on of the representatives of the leading  (in  17  \u2013  18<br \/>centuries) school of common law and treaty  theory  of  state  origins.  The<br \/>school expressed the basic demands  of  bourgeoisie  in  its  struggle  with<br \/>feudalism; its theoretical basement was outlook, turned out as a  result  of<br \/>the revolution in natural history, reformation, and a bundle of ideas,  left<br \/>from humanism in 15 \u201316 centuries.<br \/>   It must be noted here that although the school had a  common  theoretical<br \/>base it was not homogeneous. It had lots of trends, which differed from  one<br \/>another by phases of bourgeoisie development, stages of  her  struggle  with<br \/>feudalism, quantity of different class\u2019s representatives  in  a  state,  and<br \/>differences in bourgeoisie itself, because different  groups  had  different<br \/>opinions on implementing their demands. These differences can be  seen  when<br \/>answering the questions on practical implementation of the ideas  of  common<br \/>law, ex. Who is the bearer of sovereignty: people or monarch, which form  of<br \/>government is the best for human nature, etc.<br \/>   The problem of the state origins \u2013 a  theoretical  question  \u2013  had  also<br \/>different answers. They all agreed that before state there was a  so  called<br \/>\u201cnatural condition\u201d. But what was this \u201cnatural condition\u201d was  a  point  of<br \/>debates. For one of the theorists it was a realm of unlimited freedom,  wild<br \/>anarchy, leading to war of \u201call  against  all\u201d  (Hobbes);  for  others  \u2013  a<br \/>peaceful  idealistic  state  of  freedom   and   innocence,   \u201cGolden   Age\u201d<br \/>(Rousseau); others thought it was unlimited personal freedom (Loch).<br \/>   For many preachers of this theory \u201cnatural condition\u201d was a philosophical<br \/>dogma or, as Golbach said, fiction. But this fiction helped  ideologists  of<br \/>bourgeoisie to criticize pre-capitalistic social and  political  regime  and<br \/>to prophecy the victory of bourgeoisie. \u201cIn this society\u2026 - wrote Marx \u2013  an<br \/>individual is free from natural bonds, etc.,  that  in  the  past  made  him<br \/>belong to a certain limited human community.\u201d<br \/>   Theorists of natural law consider state as a result of a juridical act  \u2013<br \/>Treaty of the society, of people\u2019s free will.<br \/>   The idea of natural law and treaty state origins can be  found  in  Greek<br \/>and Roman philosophy and works, and in the works of  feudalism  scholars  in<br \/>middle ages. But in 17 \u2013 18 centuries  these  ideas  became  more  developed<br \/>with some peculiar features, because they lose  theological  context  common<br \/>for medieval scholars, and na\u043fve naturalism of ancient  ones,  because  some<br \/>of them considered animals as subjects of law. But the main thing is that  a<br \/>theory of international law of the 17 \u2013 18 centuries  had  different  class\u2019<br \/>essence. It expressed strong demands of bourgeoisie, struggling hard for  on<br \/>its way to power.<br \/>   The views on the contents of the Treaty were also different. Hobbes calls<br \/>a treaty via people an  act  by  which  all  population  loses  all  natural<br \/>freedom and rights in monarch\u2019s favour and permit  him  an  unlimited  power<br \/>upon them.  Loch thought that an individual  who  enters  this  society  via<br \/>treaty loses his rights only partly (right for self-help, self-defense  when<br \/>something is threatening his natural rights), in favour of the  other  part:<br \/>private property and freedom. Golbach defined the Treaty of the  society  as<br \/>a bundle of conditions necessary for organizing and  saving  society.  Denny<br \/>Didreau thought of the Treaty of the society a bit differently.  \u201cPeople,  \u2013<br \/>he wrote, \u2013 quickly understood that if they continued using  their  freedom,<br \/>their power, their independence\u2026 then the situation of every  single  person<br \/>would be even more  miserable,  than  that  if  he  lived  separately;  they<br \/>realized  that  every  person  has  to  sacrifice  a  part  of  his  natural<br \/>independence and to submit to will, that would be  the  will  of  the  whole<br \/>society and would be, so to say, common center and a  point  of  unification<br \/>of all their wills and powers. That is the origin of rulers.\u201d<br \/>   There is no need to say about theoretical unsoundness of this concept  of<br \/>the  school  of  natural  law.  Even  in  the  18  century  some   bourgeois<br \/>philosophers found the antihistorical essence of these views.  For  example,<br \/>Jum says that natural condition is a  fiction  of  the  philosophers.  State<br \/>emerges not as a result of a treaty but historically. Some  also  said  that<br \/>people could not invent a term \u201cstate\u201d, not knowing the practice. The  first<br \/>Russian law  professor  Semen  Jefimovitch  Desnitskiy  abruptly  criticized<br \/>\u201cnatural law\u201d and mostly Pouffendorf. \u201cThe works of Pouffendorf \u2013 he said  \u2013<br \/>was unnecessary, because writing of  states  of  humankind  that  had  never<br \/>existed, is a very unworthy deed.\u201d<br \/><br \/>Chapter II<br \/><br \/>   It is important to show which natural conditions were the soil  for  such<br \/>an illusion of natural state and treaty state origins, and to show the  role<br \/>and importance of this idea in the class struggle of that time.<br \/>   Marx said that the individual who enters the society union via treaty, as<br \/>seen by theorists of the school of natural law, is  a  result  of  descended<br \/>feudal society forms and developed in the 16-century new productive  powers.<br \/>A great  mistake  of  natural  law  theorists  was  that  in  their  opinion<br \/>individual has not developed historically, but  set  up  by  nature  itself.<br \/>Features common for bourgeoisie were proclaimed as common for mankind.<br \/>   But treaty of the society was regarded by many adepts of natural law  not<br \/>as a historical fact but as a logic ground, hypothesis  for  explaining  the<br \/>difference between state and  natural  condition,  i.e.  between  state  and<br \/>anarchy for explaining  one  or  the  other  form  of  state,  ex.  monarchy<br \/>(Gratius), democratic republic (Rousseau). It must be added  that  in  those<br \/>historical  conditions  the  theory  of  the  treaty  of  the  society   had<br \/>progressive meaning  for  struggle  with  feudal  theories,  ex.  theocratic<br \/>concept of state origins and patrimonial theory, which viewed the  state  as<br \/>property of the monarch.<br \/>   A statement about the dualism of law is common for the treaty theory.  It<br \/>differentiates  the  natural[1]  and  positive  law,  i.e.  given   by   the<br \/>legislation of a state[2]. Natural  law  is  prior  to  society  and  state;<br \/>positive law \u2013 to creating a state.<br \/>   This dualism in notions of law is also depraved feature in the theory  of<br \/>natural law, because the metaphysical way of thinking, common for  bourgeois<br \/>ideologists, was not able to explain the unsteadiness  and  variety  in  the<br \/>law.<br \/>   For the ideologists of bourgeoisie it is common to consider law and state<br \/>as an expression of the people\u2019s will. It is of course wrong, from or  point<br \/>of view. But in those historical conditions of  struggle  against  feudalism<br \/>and absolute monarchy, this illusion  had  certainly  a  progressive  sense,<br \/>because with the help of this idea bourgeoisie was  achieving  abolition  of<br \/>the system of privileges and setting up a  representative  system  in  state<br \/>system.<br \/>   Hugo Gratius is  one  of  the  earliest  bourgeoisie  ideologists  and  a<br \/>representative of school of natural law. His views were formed at  the  time<br \/>when the process of formation of bourgeois  state  in  Netherlands  had  not<br \/>finished yet, and the British one was only starting. It must be  noted  that<br \/>the struggle of the Dutch against Spanish  king  Phillip  II  made  a  great<br \/>influence on Gratius. The problems of international  law,  examined  by  him<br \/>were set up  by  the  bloody  30-years  war,  competition  between  Holland,<br \/>England and Spain and their  fighting for the leadership at the sea.<br \/><br \/>   It must be noted that in the system of Gratius\u2019s views there is  no  such<br \/>political sharpness  as  is  common  for  Rousseau  or  even  for  Loch.  He<br \/>expresses the interests of such groups of bourgeoisie, which  were  able  to<br \/>make a deal with feudalism. He is a monarchist according to his beliefs  and<br \/>opposes the idea of people\u2019s sovereignty. He  also  doesn\u2019t  want  to  throw<br \/>away religious world outlook.<br \/>   Hugo Gratius differentiates law as natural and voluntarium.  Natural  law<br \/>according to him is a deed,  which  is  considered  morally  disgraceful  or<br \/>morally necessary, according to whether it contradicts the  nature  or  not;<br \/>that\u2019s why this deed is  forbidden  or  allowed  by  the  God  himself,  the<br \/>creator of the nature.\u201d Natural law is \u201c\u2026so stable that  cannot  by  changed<br \/>by God himself.\u201d He also spreads the natural law  to  everything,  which  is<br \/>dependable from the human\u2019s will, and also  consequences,  which  flow  from<br \/>the acts of the human\u2019s will. Natural law sometimes  depends  on  the  time.<br \/>For example, the right to private property is ser up  by  the  human\u2019s  will<br \/>and that\u2019s why natural law prohibits the theft of it. That is, the theft  is<br \/>prohibited by the natural law.<br \/>   The common possession was natural until private property was established.<br \/>The realization of your right with the  help  of  force  was  common  before<br \/>setting up civil laws.<br \/>   The law, set up by will, according to Hugo Gratius can be human or  godly<br \/>law. In its turn, human law can  be  either  internal  law  of  a  state  or<br \/>human\u2019s law in a narrower and at the same  time  broader  meaning.  Internal<br \/>law of the state flows from the civil power, ruling in a state. Human\u2019s  law<br \/>in a narrower meaning does not flow  from  it.  As  for  human\u2019s  law  in  a<br \/>broader meaning, it is the law of peoples (jus gentium), which has  a  power<br \/>from the will of all living peoples or most of them. Speaking of a  law  set<br \/>up by God Gratius asserts that it flows right from the God\u2019s will.<br \/>   Of course, Hugo Gratius according to  his  metaphysical  outlook  asserts<br \/>that no society is possible without a law. The law is not a result  but  the<br \/>prior event, flowing from the human nature. From the essence of  law,  which<br \/>is a desire to communication, flows a range of  necessities:  not  to  touch<br \/>not your own belongings, keep a promise,  pay  for  inflicted  damage,  etc.<br \/>This antihistorical outlook on the essence of  law  and  the  appearance  of<br \/>some of it aspects was  common  for  those  historical  conditions  and  was<br \/>necessary for bourgeoisie as an ideological weapon  in  a  struggle  against<br \/>the feudal system for bourgeois law order.<br \/>   Hugo Gratius defines the law into features and separates it into the  law<br \/>of domination and the equality. In his book, mentioned above, he  says  that<br \/>a \u201claw is a thing that doesn\u2019t contradict justice. What contradicts  justice<br \/>is against the nature of creatures  who  possess  mind  and  communication.\u201d<br \/>\u201cJustice can be dualistic.<br \/>     a) Justice is the  relation  between  the  equal  (brothers,  friends,<br \/>        citizens and allies, etc.). This is a law of equality.<br \/>     b) Justice is the relation between the dominant and submissive (father<br \/>        and children, master and slave, God and people, etc.).  This  is  a<br \/>        law of dominance.\u201d<br \/>   From all this he excludes the law concerning individuals. It is  a  moral<br \/>quality common for  personality,  according  to  which  it  is  possible  to<br \/>possess something or to act in one way or another. This law is  adjacent  to<br \/>personality, although it is often connected with things. Law  ability  is  a<br \/>law itself according to Hugo. This law is a  power  upon  oneself  (freedom)<br \/>and upon other people (father\u2019s or master\u2019s powers), property (complete  and<br \/>incomplete), the right to demand, etc. Law ability  is  divided  into  lower<br \/>(personal use) and higher (adjacent to all humankind for the good).<br \/>   So Hugo Gratius appears to have  a  division  of  law  into  natural  and<br \/>voluntarium (positive), which is common systematic mistake for  natural  law<br \/>concept. It is also common  for  him  to  have  metaphysical  views  on  the<br \/>justice in relation between brothers, people. He sets in the  same  row  the<br \/>father, master, king and God, calling them all dominants.  That  means  that<br \/>Gratius does not differentiate economic, ideological  and  state  relations.<br \/>But  the  essence  of  law,  given   by   Hugo   Gratius,   is   objectively<br \/>propagandizing the eternity of slavery. It is common for Hugo Gratius to  be<br \/>a supporter of the monarchy and even more  than  that:  in  his  views,  the<br \/>medieval jurisprudence remains.<br \/>   Although a state is according to definition an act of  creative  activity<br \/>and the  best  form  of  people\u2019s  unification,  based  on  a  treaty,  i.e.<br \/>supposing the sovereignty of people, Gratius denies  the  fact  that  people<br \/>possess sovereignty. He does not agree that people\u2019s  will  is  higher  than<br \/>the will of a monarch. Considering that people were  once  sovereign  he  is<br \/>sure they passed their sovereignty freely to the people they elected. So  he<br \/>stands for medieval patrimonial theory, according  to  which  the  juridical<br \/>nature of the nature of the state\u2019s power  is  not  different  from  private<br \/>property right.<br \/>   That\u2019s why a crime of monarch should not lead to depriving of power, just<br \/>as a crime of a simple person in most cases does not lead to  depriving  him<br \/>of his property. State territory and state possessions is  the  property  of<br \/>the monarch.<br \/>   Those reactionary views of Hugo Gratius show that he was a representative<br \/>of such a group of  bourgeoisie  that  did  not  make  a  deal  with  feudal<br \/>elements, which mostly determined the results of the Dutch Revolution.<br \/><br \/><br \/>Chapter III<br \/><br \/>   Treatise \u201cThe Three books on the right of war and peace\u201d is dedicated to,<br \/>as seen from the name, problems of  international  public  law.  In  it  the<br \/>author looks at the  problem  of  justice,  sources  of  international  law,<br \/>possibility of just war and types of just wars, of influence of the  war  to<br \/>juridical relations, which existed before, of rules of waging war, etc.<br \/>   Gratius writes that his treatise is written in the  defense  of  justice.<br \/>This view on justice is as metaphysical  as  view  on  state  and  law.  The<br \/>origins of this metaphysical view are shown in the work F.  Engels  \u201cTo  the<br \/>living problem\u201d. Looking over the emerging of state and law,  Engels  writes<br \/>that at a certain stage of class  society  development  complex  legislation<br \/>and a class of professional  lawyers  emerges.  Together  with  lawyers  the<br \/>study of law emerges, which \u201cin its  later  development  compares  juridical<br \/>systems of different peoples and different epochs,  not  as  reflections  of<br \/>economic relations but as self-explaining  systems.  This  comparison  finds<br \/>similarities. The lawyers call everything more or less similar in  different<br \/>systems natural law. The scale that measures what is related to natural  law<br \/>is operating through the most abstract expression  of  the  law  \u2013  justice.<br \/>Since then the main goal of development of the law, in the lawyers  opinion,<br \/>is to draw human life conditions nearer to justice, or eternal justice.  But<br \/>this justice  always  expresses  only  ideological  expression  of  existing<br \/>economic relations from their conservative or revolutionary point  of  view.<br \/>The justice of Greeks and Romans was slavery, the justice of bourgeoisie  of<br \/>1789 demanded to overthrow feudalism, because it  is  unjust.  So  views  on<br \/>eternal justice vary not only in different places or times,  but  they  also<br \/>vary from person to person.\u201d<br \/>   So, the justice which Gratius speaks about is bourgeois justice. \u201cDue  to<br \/>the will of the Creator of nature, a human alone is  helpless  and  requires<br \/>lots of things for a good living. That is why natural law includes  benefit.<br \/>It was a reason of emerging of a state law. Both  the  community  and  power<br \/>emerged because of some benefit. As for international law or the law of  the<br \/>peoples, it appeared according to custom and agreement of peoples in  favour<br \/>of all the communities. The other source of it is nature and holy laws.<br \/>   According to Gratius, just as a criminal of  internal  state  legislation<br \/>ruins his future well-being and the one of his descendants, the criminal  of<br \/>the natural law ruins the basement of his future peace.  Peoples  who  break<br \/>this rule, break the walls  erected  for  their  safety  forever.  There  is<br \/>nothing solid beyond the law.<br \/>   The main problem in \u201cThe Three books on the Right of War  and  Peace\u201d  is<br \/>the problem of the relation between the war and law, in other words,  can  a<br \/>war be fair and that\u2019s why legal. Gratius argues with  the  point  that  war<br \/>and law can\u2019t be compatible and that voice  of  law  is  overridden  by  the<br \/>sound of weapon. He dedicates a significant part of his work  to  refutation<br \/>of this, as he says, mistake. \u201cDuring a war only civil  laws  keep  silence,<br \/>because they are created for peace, but  not  the  natural  ones,  they  are<br \/>eternal.\u201d He greatly believes in the existence of some  common  law  in  the<br \/>international relations,  which  works  both  for  war  and  peace.  \u201cIt  is<br \/>necessary to start a war to keep justice, and to  continue  a  started  war,<br \/>keeping in the limits of law.<br \/>   According to Gratius, war can be waged only against those who  cannot  be<br \/>made doing something in a legal order. Legal forms are common for those  who<br \/>consider themselves weaker. For those who  consider  themselves  equal  wars<br \/>must be waged. \u201cDuring a war one must keep to the act of peace and one  must<br \/>start a war only intending to finish it as fast as possible.<br \/>   In the treatise, the war in a broad  sense  is  defined  as  a  state  of<br \/>struggle with the force, as solving  of  controversial  questions  with  the<br \/>implementation of force. This definition of war spreads  to  many  types  of<br \/>wars. Depending on the sides (subjects), taking part in  a  war,  the  force<br \/>can be private (self-defense by a person  not  possessing  a  state  power),<br \/>public (state) or combined (on one hand \u2013 public, one the other -  private).<br \/>In a narrower sense, war is an armed conflict between states. The  right  of<br \/>war is justice, but in a negative meaning: thing that  does  not  contradict<br \/>to justice. \u201cThe first inducements of nature do not contradict it,  even  on<br \/>the contrary.\u201d That\u2019s the way in which he tries to  prove  it.  Saving  life<br \/>and limbs, saving belongings, useful  for  it  \u2013  correspond  to  the  first<br \/>inducements of nature. In other words, care of oneself does  not  contradict<br \/>to community life, until they break somebody else\u2019s right.  The  force  that<br \/>doesn\u2019t break another\u2019s right  is  legal.  That  means  that,  according  to<br \/>Gratius:<br \/>     1) The sources of wars are  the  passions  of  human  body  (desire  to<br \/>        possess valuables)<br \/>     2) Just war  is  possible,  which  deserves  approval  of  natural  and<br \/>        international law.<br \/>   Gratius defines two stages of just public war:<br \/>  1) Solemn just war<br \/>  2) Simply just war<br \/>   \u201cFor the war to have solemn character, two conditions  are  required:  it<br \/>must be waged by the will of highest  rulers  of  the  states,  and  certain<br \/>customs must be kept\u2026 Both of those are required, because  any  of  them  is<br \/>not enough without another.<br \/>   Public war is  not  solemn;  it  can  be  free  from  those  customs  and<br \/>ceremonies; it can be waged  against  anyone  by  anyone\u2019s  authority.  That<br \/>means that any person has a right to wage his own war. But as war may  cause<br \/>danger for the whole state most legislatures forbid it.  War  can  be  waged<br \/>only by the highest authority.\u201d<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>Conclusion<br \/><br \/><br \/>   Neither Gratius,  nor  any  other  bourgeois  scholars  of  international<br \/>relations and international law managed to find out the reasons of  war  and<br \/>the principle difference between just and unjust  war.  One  of  my  sources<br \/>says that only Marxist theory managed it. According  to  Marxist\u2019  point  of<br \/>view just war is not a predatory one but a war of liberation,  which  has  a<br \/>goal of protecting the people of external  attack  or  of  freeing  colonies<br \/>from the \u201coppression\u201d of imperialism, etc. And unjust  war  is  a  predatory<br \/>war, which has a goal to conquer and slave the other state\u2019s people.  But  I<br \/>must say that these views are out-of-date of course.<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>Bibliography<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>1 Huizinga J The waiting of the Middle Ages. New York: Doubleday &amp;<br \/><br \/>Company Inc 1956<br \/><br \/>2 Parry J H The Establishment of the Europian Hegemony: 1415-1715<br \/><br \/>New York: Harper &amp; Row Publishers 1966<\/pre>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The teaching of Hugo Gratius Tyumen State University Faculty of History International Relations Department Term paper \u201cThe teaching of Hugo Gratius of war and peace.\u201d Done by Denis Brovka, Student of group 984 Checked by Christopher Goldsmith Tyumen 2000Contents.Introduction 3Chapter I 4Chapter II 7Chapter III 12Conclusion 15Bibliography 16Introduction Hugo Gratius, a scientist and a lawyer [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/85216"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=85216"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/85216\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=85216"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=85216"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=85216"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}