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International Law and the Far Right Reflections on Law and Cynicism International Law and the Far Right Reflections on Law and Cynicism
Hoofdkenmerken
Auteur: Koskenniemi, Martti
Titel: International Law and the Far Right Reflections on Law and Cynicism
Uitgever: Stichting T.M.C. Asser Institu
ISBN: 9789067043601
Serie: Annual T.M.C. Asser Lecture, deel 4
Serie: 4
Editie: 1. ed
Prijs: € 10,00
Verschijningsdatum: 14-10-2019
Bericht: Leverbaar
Inhoudelijke kenmerken
Categorie: Intern. (publiek)recht
Taal: eng
Imprint: T.M.C. Asser Press
Technische kenmerken
Verschijningsvorm: Paperback / softback
Paginas: 42
 

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[Flaptekst]: Martti Koskenniemi on his lecture'International Law and the Far Right: Reflections on Law and Cynicism': Since the emergence of the profession in the 1870s, international lawyers have lent themselves to supporting various political projects, from ruling of empire to decolonisation, from supporting national self-determination to arguing in favour of global governance of the transnational economy. They have celebrated sovereignty and supported human rights. The recent backlash against global rule and the international institutions of the liberal 1990s, should be viewed as a political attack from a relatively privileged part of the world on the system of values and distributive power that have governed post-1968 internationalism. This backlash is often treated as a social pathology, arisen from the anger felt by European and American middle classes left behind by globalisation. I do not share this analysis. Whatever the social composition of the backlash, the policies of its leaders are neither reformist nor conservative. They are reactionary, and the question is, how to devise an effective policy to counter them. The coming struggle will be about whether reactionary, colonialist, white and male supremacist values will play a role in the international world after globalisation. If international law is not to become a servant to far right policies, or fall into irrelevance, it had better sharpen its strategic insights. Alongside self-criticism, this involves taking a break from the interminable production of minor reforms. Greater openness is needed. Not to populist leaders, but to problems of global inequality.'
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