Publication | Open Access
The Politics of International Law - 20 Years Later
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Citations
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References
2009
Year
Legal ImplicationsLawInternational Constitutional LawGlobal StudiesInternational CourtSocial SciencesPolitical ScienceInternational RuleInternational RelationsInternational Relation TheoryInternational LawHuman Rights LawWorld PoliticsPublic International LawInternational Legal StudiesInternational OrganizationStructural BiasesJournal 20International Institutions
The essay examines some of the changes in my own thinking about the politics of engaging in international law since the original publication of the article that opened the first issue of EJIL in 1990. The essay points to the change of focus from indeterminacy (to which I am as committed as ever) of legal arguments to the structural biases of international institutions. It then discusses the politics of definition, that is to say, the strategic practice of defining international situations and problems in new expert languages so as to gain control over them. It attacks the increasing ‘managerialism’ in the field and ends with a few reflections about the significance of the moment of the establishment of the Journal 20 years ago.
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