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International Law and Posthuman Theory

Edited by: Matilda Arvidsson, Emily Jones

ISBN13: 9781032044040
Published: January 2024
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £36.99



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Assembling a series of voices from across the field, this book demonstrates how posthuman theory can be employed to better understand and tackle some of the challenges faced by contemporary international law.

With the vast environmental devastation being caused by climate change, the increasing use of artificial intelligence by international legal actors, and the need for international law to face up to its colonial past, international law needs to change. But in regulating and preserving a stable global order in which states act as its main subjects, the traditional sources of international law – international legal statutes, customary international law, historical precedents and general principles of law – create a framework that slows down its capacity to act on contemporary challenges, and to imagine futures yet to come. In response, this collection maintains that posthuman theory can be used to better address the challenges faced by contemporary international law. Covering a wide array of contemporary topics – including environmental law, the law of the sea, colonialism, human rights, conflict, and the impact of science and technology – it is the first book to bring new and emerging research on posthuman theory and international law together into one volume.

This book’s posthuman engagement with central international legal debates, prefaced by the leading scholar in the field of posthuman theory, provides a perfect resource for students and scholars in international law, as well as critical and socio-legal theorists, and others with interests in posthuman thought, technology, colonialism and ecology.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
Preface by Rosi Braidotti
Introduction by Emily Jones and Matilda Arvidsson

Part 1: Methodological and Theoretical Frontiers
1. Posthuman feminism as a theoretical and methodological approach to international law
Matilda Arvidsson
2. Flat Ontology and Differentiation: In Defence of Bennett’s Vital Materialism, and Some Thoughts towards Decolonial New Materialisms for International Law
Anna Grear
3. Aesthetics, New Materialism and Legal Matter: The ‘art’ of Anglo-American colonialism
Delaney Mitchell
4. The Common Heritage of Kin-Kind
Emily Jones, Cristian van Eijk, and Gina Heathcote

Part 2: Political Economy, History and Colonialism
5. A Monument to E. G. Wakefield: New and Historical Materialist Dialogues for a Posthuman International Law
Jessie Hohmann and Christine Schwöbel-Patel
6. Neither National nor International: A Posthumanist Retelling of Tax Sovereignty
Hedvig Lärka
7. After Homo Narrans: Botany, International Law, and Senegambia in Early Racial Capitalist Worldmaking
Vanja Hamzić

Part 3: The Environment and the Nonhuman
8. Terraqueous Feminisms and the International Law of the Sea
Gina Heathcote
9. Becoming Common – Ecological Resistance, Refusal, Reparation
Marie Petersmann
10. The War on Drugs as the War on the Non-Human
Kojo Koram and Oscar Guardiola-Rivera
11. Supplanting Anthropocentric Legalities: Can the Rule of Law Tolerate Intensive Animal Agriculture?
Maneesha Deckha
12. Will human rights save the ‘anthropos’ from the ‘Anthropocene’? Limitations of human rights strategies in responding to the climate crisis
Jasmijn Leeuwenkamp

Index