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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Concepts for International Law
Editor(s): d’Aspremont, Jean; Singh, Sahib
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN: 9781783474677
Section: Chapter 58
Section Title: Universalism
Author(s): Gordon, Geoff
Number of pages: 14
Abstract/Description:
Universality has occupied a consistently central but also historically contingent role in conceptions, operations and mobilizations of international law over time. It has taken on a variety of characters as a matter of doctrine, ideology and historical materiality. Universalism has served in international law as a wellspring for both dominant ideologies and modes of resistance: it has underwritten colonial oppression, but has also been adopted for successful resistance to colonialism, and it has reappeared both in imperialist and counterhegemonic projects in postcolonial legal relations today. Universalism can be doctrinally described as an underlying principle, or abstract tenet, classically related in international law to ends of harmony, equality or autonomy. Understood in terms of dominant ideologies, however, universalism at once obscures and legitimizes the particular interests that drive the operation of international law. This has the effect of naturalizing the interests of the few that are made to apply globally. But universalism can be comprehended in still more quotidian ways. This chapter focuses on an ideological meeting point of universalism between doctrine and daily practice. That meeting point has been a site associated with empire, but it might arguably still be reclaimed and repurposed as a site in support of a different sort of political solidarity under law.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/244.html