
This Volume Provides The First Comprehensive Analysis Of International Legal Debates Between 1955 And 1975 Related To The Formal Decolonization Process. It Is During This Era, Couched Between Classic European Imperialism And A New Form Of Us-led Western Hegemony, That Fundamental Legal Debates Took Place Over A New International Legal Order For A Decolonised World. The Book Argues That This Era Presents In Essence A Battle, A Battle That Was Fought Out In Particular Over The Premises And Principles Of International Law By Diplomats, Lawyers, And Scholars. In A Moment Of Relative Weakness Of European Powers, 'newly Independent States' And International Lawyers From The South Fundamentally Challenged Traditional Western Perceptions Of International Legal Structures Engaging In Fundamental Controversies Over A New International Law. The Legal Outcomes Of This Battle Have Shaped The World We Live In Today. Contributions From A Global Set Of Authors Cover Contemporary Debates On Concepts Central To The Time, Such As Self-determination, Sources And Concessions, Non-intervention, Wars Of National Liberation, Multinational Corporations, And The Law Of The Sea. They Also Discuss Influential Institutions, Such As The United Nations, International Court Of Justice, And World Bank. The Volume Also Incorporates Contemporary Regional Approaches To International Law In The 'decolonization Era' And Portraits Of Important Scholars From The Global South.
This volume investigates the fundamental legal debates between 1955 and 1975 that sought to redefine the international legal order during the formal decolonization process. The authors, Jochen von Bernstorff and Philipp Dann, curate a collection of essays from a global set of contributors to analyze how newly independent states and scholars from the Global South challenged traditional Western legal structures. The work argues that this period functioned as a critical battleground where the premises and principles of international law were contested, ultimately shaping the contemporary global legal framework.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this volume as a significant contribution to the history of international law, particularly for its focus on the agency of the Global South. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous resource for scholars and students of international legal history.
Page Count:
464
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192589474
ISBN-13:
9780192589477
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