No future without history: The future of international law/ Sundhya Pahuja
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Journal | Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals | INTERNATIONAL LAW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan |
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INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW Do unto others in war?: the golden rule in law of armed conflict training/ | INTERNATIONAL INTELLIGENCE Developing international intelligence liasion against Islamic state : approaching one for all and all for one?/ | INTERNATIONAL LAW The hidden power of the new economic sanctions/ | INTERNATIONAL LAW No future without history: The future of international law/ | INTERNATIONAL POLITICS The importance of bona fide friendships to international politics: China’s quest for friendships that matter/ | INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS The "clash of civilisations" thesis as a tool for explaining conflicts in the contemporary world / | INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Force and legitimacy in world politics / |
The invitation to reflect upon the question ‘Toward a different IR?’ challenges those of us engaging from a legal background to ask what a different international law might look like. This necessarily involves taking stock of the historical foundations of our discipline and acknowledging the ways in which these foundations continue to shape its present form. This entails provincialising international law and approaching it as a site of struggle, rather than as a settled and neutral framework. By doing so, I argue, we can begin to envision a future for international law that is not merely an extension of its imperial past, but a departure from it. This reimagining of international law requires us to practice the discipline differently, to teach it differently, and to think about it differently. Only by doing so can we hope to create a future for international law that is more just, and maybe slightly less imperial. When we think about the future of our discipline—whether International Law or International Relations, let us remember that the future does not simply ‘arrive’ or unfold on its own. It is something that we, as international jurists, diplomats and scholars actively shape every day—and every tomorrow—through our practices, our teachings, and our commitments.
INTERNATIONAL LAW, CRISIS, TWAIL
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