Article contents
Towards a Postcolonial Genealogy of International Organizations Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2018
Abstract
This article sketches the contours of a postcolonial genealogy of international organizations law. Contrary to conventional accounts, which remain strongly Eurocentric, the article claims that international organizations law did not emerge until the closing stages of the Second World War, and that its evolution was strongly influenced by the accelerating processes of decolonization that accompanied its birth. More specifically, the article argues that the emergence of international organizations law was spurred by a series of perceived problems regarding the adequacy of the international legal system in the aftermath of the end of formal colonial rule, in which the relations of power constructed through colonialism remained profoundly implicated. The politics of decolonization thus shaped the practice of international organizations, provided the catalyst for many of the foundational cases in international organizations law, and motivated much of its early doctrinal scholarship. Moreover, the article argues that the functionalist logic of international organizations law is deeply embedded in a postcolonial imaginary which, by supporting the division of the world into formally equivalent nation-states, ostensibly cuts against the hegemonic territorialism of colonial governance.
- Type
- INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY: Symposium on the ‘Trajectories of International Legal Histories’
- Information
- Copyright
- © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2018
Footnotes
B.A., LL.B.(Hons), LL.M.(Hons) (Auck), J.S.D. (NYU) [[email protected]]. The first draft of this article was completed during a delightful sabbatical stay as an External Scientific Fellow at the Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law. Thanks to the Directors of the Institute, and especially Hélène Ruiz Fabri. Different versions of the article were presented to audiences at a Workshop of the ESIL Interest Group on International Organizations, LJIL’s 30th Anniversary Symposium on ‘The Trajectories of International Legal History’, the London School of Economics, the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law at the University of Cambridge, a Symposium on ‘The Dynamic Evolution of International Law’ held at Victoria University of Wellington Faculty of Law, and the Singapore Symposium in Legal Theory. Thanks to the participants in all those events for their questions and criticisms. Special thanks to Davinia Aziz, Eyal Benvenisti, Catherine Brölmann, Damian Chalmers, Megan Donaldson, Edouard Fromageau, Andrew Halpin, Kenneth Keith, Fernando Lusa Bordin, Campbell McLachlan, Sarah Nouwen, Thomas Poole, Surabhi Ranganathan, Gerry Simpson, Tan Hsien-Li, Ingo Venzke and LJIL’s Editors and anonymous reviewers. Thanks also to Georgia Whelan for excellent research assistance. I gratefully acknowledge the support of a University Research Fund grant from Victoria University of Wellington.
References
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154 Competence of the ILO in regard to International Regulation of the Conditions of Labour of Persons Employed in Agriculture, Proceedings, 5 July 1922, Annex 25c, at 218 (Speech by M.J. Maenhaut, representing the International Agricultural Commission).
155 Competence of the ILO in regard to International Regulation of the Conditions of Labour of Persons Employed in Agriculture, Proceedings, 3 August 1922, Annex 37, at 299 (Speech by M.A. de LaPradelle, representing the French Government).
156 Competence of the ILO in regard to International Regulation of the Conditions of Labour of Persons Employed in Agriculture, Proceedings, 6 July 1922, PCIJ (ser. C), No. 1, Annex 26, at 268 (speech by M. Albert Thomas).
157 Commission to Study the Organization of Peace, ‘Preliminary Report’ (April 1941) 359 International Conciliation, 195, 198–9Google Scholar.
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159 Mitrany, D., ‘The Functional Approach to World Organization’, (1948) 24 International Affairs 350, at 352–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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161 Jenks, supra note 68, at 270.
162 Reparation for Injuries, supra note 73, at 179.
163 Ibid., at 180.
164 Ahluwalia, supra note 124, at 199. See also UN Charter, supra note 60, Art. 105; 1946 Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations, 1 UNTS 15, at preamble; Art. IV, s. 11 and 14; and Art. VI, s. 22.
165 Jurisdiction of the European Commission of the Danube, supra note 40, at 64.
166 Legality of the Use by a State of Nuclear Weapons in Armed Conflict, Advisory Opinion of 8 July 1996, [1996] ICJ Rep. 66, at 78. See also Interpretation of the Agreement of 25 March 1951 between the WHO and Egypt, Advisory Opinion of 20 December 1980, [1980] ICJ Rep. 99, at 103 (Judge Gros, Separate Opinion) (‘In the absence of a “super-State”, each international organization has only the competence which has been conferred on it by the States which founded it, and its powers are strictly limited to whatever is necessary to perform the functions which its constitutive charter has defined. This is thus a compétence d’attribution, i.e., only such competence as States have “attributed” to the organization.’).
167 Shihata, I.F.I., ‘The Dynamic Evolution of International Organizations: The Case of the World Bank’, (2000) 2 Journal of the History of International Law 217, at 221CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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173 Lazarus, N., ‘“Third Worldism” and the Political Imaginary of Postcolonial Studies’, in Huggan, G. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Postcolonial Studies (2013), Ch. 14Google Scholar.
174 Also consider the postcolonial backgrounds to significant cases such as Interpretation of the Agreement between the WHO and Egypt, supra note 166; Legality of the Use by a State of Nuclear Weapons, supra note 166; and Case Concerning East Timor (Portugal v. Australia), Judgment of 30 June 1995, [1995] ICJ Rep. 90.
175 See, e.g., Chimni, B.S., ‘International Institutions Today: An Imperial Global State in the Making’, (2004) 15 EJIL 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar. In this sense, the works by global South scholars discussed in Section 5 of this article are representative of the ‘first wave’ of Third World approaches to international law. See generally Anghie, A., ‘TWAIL: Past and Future’, (2008) 10 International Community Law Review 479CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
176 Pahuja, supra note 1, at 47.
177 Slaughter, supra note 46; Harrison, G., The World Bank and Africa: The Construction of Governance States (2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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