The position for which Hull is best known, embodied in her two most recent books, is that Germany before and during World War I was uniquely indifferent to international law among the great powers, and (contrary to established historiography) that its responsibility for bringing the war about was much greater than that of the
Allied powers. In 2014, Hull published
A Scrap of Paper: Breaking and Making International Law During the Great War, analyzing the Allied
blockade of Germany. The book was criticized by other historians for failing "to take considerations of morality and, perhaps more importantly, legitimacy [of the blockade] into account".
Michael Geyer of the University of Chicago has stated that "Isabel V. Hull is one of the most accomplished German historians and surely the best of her generation," and she has been described by
VICE News as "one of America's leading scholars on the role of fascism in history." She is a winner of the
Ralph Waldo Emerson Award and the
Leo Gershoy Award (1996), is a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been a
Guggenheim Fellow and an Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Research Fellow. In 2013, she was awarded the inaugural International Research Support Prize by the Max Weber Stiftung and the Historisches Kolleg. ==Bibliography==