I am writing this introduction as Israel’s violence against the Palestinian people – despite ICJ provisional measures, a landmark advisory opinion, and applications for arrest warrants by the ICC’s Office of the Prosecutor – is continuing unabated. In the eclectic community of critical international lawyers, this has been a source of activism and mobilization as much as friction and hesitation – epistolary indictments of genocidal violence published alongside eulogies for a faded professional faith.Footnote 1 How to navigate concerns with international law’s colonial complicities and liberal limitations at a moment when ‘the language of legality has become the dominant frame of popular and political discourse’ related to Palestine?Footnote 2 Which tactical trade-offs and choices are to be made when this suffering and its long historical lineages are translated in the language of international law (or should such translation altogether be avoided)?Footnote 3 Is this a moment of reckoning or reform, redemption or refusal?
In a series of essays recently published in the London Review of International Law, these questions were foregrounded in incisive and important ways.Footnote 4 For some within the critical community – a delineation drawn in the collection’s framing – the current moment signals the reinvigoration and recovered legitimacy of international law as a practice of ‘deep political and moral significance’ that ties together new bonds of ‘transnational solidarity’ and might, ‘in the longer term’, serve the ‘cause of world peace’.Footnote 5 Yet, for others it is precisely the enchantment with this promise that sustains a state of ‘cruel optimism’ – a liberal longing which actively inhibits forms of political action and resistance targeted at the material levers of colonial violence and capital accumulation.Footnote 6
The sources of this discontent are familiar. Not only does international law fail in constraining Israel’s violence, it is also providing a language of rationalization and justification – a cover of ‘humanitarian camouflage’ – for the unfolding ‘colonial war of annihilation’.Footnote 7 Through the infinite expansion of the ‘human shielding charge’, Nicola Perugini and Neve Gordon argue, the law is ‘operationalize[d] … as a tool legitimizing genocide’.Footnote 8 These dynamics of de-civilianization do not result from a flawed or ‘unequal application’ of legal norms, Robert Knox observes, but rather from the ‘internalisation [in IHL] of a racialised division between civilised and uncivilised forms of violence’ – a dividing line obscured by technologies of ‘racial mystification’.Footnote 9 Oriented towards moments of crisis or spectacular violence,Footnote 10 international law is further indicted for its failure to capture and conceptualize patterns of ‘slow violence’Footnote 11 – the ‘material structures of the ongoing Nakba’,Footnote 12 ‘settler colonialism’,Footnote 13 ‘systemic economic harm’,Footnote 14 and ‘the social relations of capitalism and imperialism’ from which Israel’s actions are ‘abstracted’.Footnote 15 As international law delineates what matters and what is excluded from mattering in its normative operations – ‘highlight[ing] some aspects of the world while leaving other aspects in the dark’Footnote 16 – these structural patterns risk being rendered ‘materially unintelligible’.Footnote 17
Not only does international law enable and obscure systemic harm, the critical claim continues, it also displaces or derails alternative (more promising) forms of political action – the ‘juridification of resistance’ as sign and source of an ‘inability to construct a world meaningfully cohered around forms of political representation’.Footnote 18 Specifically related to prospects of collective self-determination, Vasuki Nesiah has pointed to the narrow political pathways provided by international law and the inadequacy of ‘statist vocabularies of resistance that we inherited from the first phase of anti-colonial struggle’.Footnote 19 This troubling translation of revolutionary struggle in the ‘abstract desire for statehood’ epitomizes how the legal form cabins and curtails emancipatory politics within the limits of liberal modernity.Footnote 20
Yet, if these critical concerns are now somewhat commonplace – Umut Özsu laments how the critique of international law has become a ‘mundane, sloganistic affair’Footnote 21 – lingering in many interventions is the dream of different foundations and new beginnings.Footnote 22 Can international law shed its colonial skin and ‘be mobilised in the service of a larger liberatory strategy, an anti-imperialist struggle against the material structures of the ongoing Nakba’?Footnote 23 ‘[C]an we tactically use international law to universalise this particular moment of Palestinian liberation and solidarity – [a] tool for coalition-building towards common emancipatory goals?’Footnote 24 Could international law disrupt the ‘material conditions that make the circumstances unfolding in Gaza possible: the larger supply chain that provisions, supports, and profits from armed conflict’?Footnote 25 Can practices of Third World solidarity generate ‘another international law’ – or, phrased in relation to its subaltern origins, an ‘other international law’?Footnote 26
The essential element of this critical reorientation is the social, historical and epistemological location of its emergence. It is ‘from the standpoint of the oppressed’, Souheir Edelbi argues, that international law can be reclaimed and reimagined.Footnote 27 Prospects of ‘another international law’, Christopher Gevers echoes, hinge on ‘the legal tactics, traditions and epistemologies [that] struggles [by] the majority of the world’s people [against] colonialism and apartheid … generated’.Footnote 28 This ‘emancipatory potential of a different international law’, Abdelghany Sayed and Luis Eslava believe, emerges from ‘a left-handed world of difference that can only exist in the struggle of becoming in a relational manner’ – a vision shaped by Gloria Anzaldúa’s ‘mundo surdo’ and Partha Chatterjee’s invocation of ‘most of the world’.Footnote 29 Global protests, for Vasuki Nesiah, ‘draw the audience’s engagement from the court to the street, from performing fidelity to performing heresy’, in a ‘profane and profound act of dissensus against the distributive work of the legal priesthood and canonical claims to juridical authority in worldmaking and unmaking’.Footnote 30 For such dissensus, Shahd Hammouri concludes, ‘practices, norms, histories and scholarly works of the Global South must be taken from the fringes to the centre’.Footnote 31
It is as an expression of this disciplinary movement from the fringes to the centre that this symposium is conceived – an attempt at rethinking international law from the ‘elsewhere’ and the ‘out of place’.Footnote 32 The articles it presents precede and – with the exception of Abdelghany Sayed’s evocative argument on the visual vocabulary of human shields – do not speak to the current horrors in Gaza. Yet, in their inspiring exploration of Global South perspectives on methodology and critique in international law, they show an explicit engagement with the themes touched on above: the violence that international law enables, its institutional biases and inertias, false universalisms and archival absences, the many lineages of harm that remain legally illegible, the worlds written out of the world, the lives rendered ungrievable, the political possibilities foreclosed, stories untold, voices unheard. In this sense, many TWAIL scholars noted, Palestine is painfully paradigmatic of the problems that plague the Global South’s relation with international law more broadly.Footnote 33 Diagnosing and responding to these problems, the pieces provide new perspectives that retrieve voices erased in the ‘blank spaces of the historical record’,Footnote 34 disrupt international law’s ontological divides, foreground its skewed institutional routines, and counter its civilizational and orientalist (mis)conceptions and commitments. While many tensions inevitably remain unresolved, the contributions thereby provide an opening to modes of analysis and critique that transgress the liberal limitations of international law as a discipline.
Even though the articles guide us to unconventional spaces of international legal ordering presumed to be peripheral – from the former polities of Western Sudan to the banks of the Amazon, from the bloodlands of the Global War on Terror to the fractured social landscape of post-war Singapore – the Global South is not primarily seen as a geographical location (or as a stable set of associated identities tied to those).Footnote 35 If anything, what these articles show is how worlds are interwoven and how spatially scattered sites are tied together through processes of dis/ordering with distinct distributive outcomes – the co-constitutive interlacing of international law’s civilizational hierarchies with material regimes of extraction and capital accumulation.Footnote 36 While the Global South thereby proves an unstable signifier across the interventions in this symposium – an epistemological condition, material relation, subject position or archival location – the perspectives that are foregrounded share an ambition to diagnose, disrupt and disorder these legally embedded hierarchies, regimes and narratives and, in doing so, to extend international law’s methodological and critical repertoire.
The symposium brings together pieces that were presented at the T.M.C. Asser Workshop on Method, Methodology and Critique in International Law (in December 2021).Footnote 37 The purpose of this workshop (and the Lecture Series from which it emerged) was to collectively unsettle ways of seeing, thinking and writing international law.Footnote 38 In this sense, the methodological focus was not limited to or primarily oriented at empirical questions (on which data to collect, which methods to use or which standards of evaluation to apply in international law) but aimed to perceive, pervert or play with the professional commitments, ideological structures, material forms and fraught histories that frame and limit which questions can be asked, which styles can be employed and which worlds can come to matter in legal writing. The workshop sought to spark experimental, exploratory, and emancipatory approaches that could contribute to and reflect differently upon questions of international legal theory and critique.
This symposium foregrounds new methodological perspectives on international law emerging in and from the Global South. While all the articles work to avoid, trouble or invert the gaze of international law in its modernist, Western appearance – to provincialize, in Chakrabarty’s terms, its presumptions of disenchanted space, secular time, and sovereignty – they do not follow a coherent critical program or theoretical script. Thinking from various traditions and positionalities, they open methodological and critical pathways inspired by personal phenomenological perspectives, embodied micro-histories, Amazonian onto-epistemologies and an attentiveness to international law’s others. They thereby both reveal and destabilize the visual imaginaries, grand historiographies, subtle semiotics and shadow hauntologies that shape the performative effects of international legal ordering in its hegemonic form. International law’s constitutive connection with the colonial encounter – and contemporary colonial continuities – is a consistent theme across the contributions. In tracing and critically countering these legacies and relations, they thereby engage and extend key substantive threads of TWAIL literature.
A first substantive theme relates to international law’s colonial continuities in relation to the use of force and how it structurally ‘enabl[es] and justif[ies] violence against the South’.Footnote 39 In ‘What We Talk about when We Talk about “Human Shields”: Reading International Law through Images’, Abdelghany Sayed – in a prescient anticipation of the atrocities unfolding in Gaza – focuses on how the reference to ‘human shields’ ‘profoundly shapes how international law operates in scenes of intense organised violence’.Footnote 40 Emphasizing the ‘lived history of the peoples of the Global South’, Abdelghany thereby shows how the invocation of this trope erodes the civilian status of those placed at the wrong side of international law’s lines of civilizational division.Footnote 41 To capture and counteract these operations of the ‘human shield’, the article ‘advocates a turn to the visual in legal scholarship’ – a conceptualization of culturally embedded images that structure scenes of war ‘where anything may be (re)interpreted, legally, as liable to indirect, and sometimes direct, harm’.Footnote 42 If the language of ‘human shields’ is now deployed in unprecedented ways to justify violence against a civilian population, Abdelghany shows, this hinges on a latent visual imaginary through which subaltern lives are rendered ungrievable.Footnote 43 In this important methodological reorientation, the article invites us to reflect on how international law’s production of ‘otherness’ and its ‘dynamics of difference’ are culturally enacted and sustained.Footnote 44 The ‘images, imaginations, fantasies, and (mis)conceptions about the non-European’ that are inscribed in ‘international law’s civilisational distinctions’, he argues, ‘enable[] the construction of Global South people … as international law’s threshold subjects – not combatants but not human-civilians either’. Focused on these visual vocabularies, the article asserts that we cannot disconnect the concept of the ‘human shield’ from ‘Orientalist constructions of the spaces and populations of the Global South’.Footnote 45 In its attempt to trace and disrupt the ‘visual culture’ that references to ‘human shields’ rely upon and reproduce, Abdelghany strives for a restoration of the civilian category that ‘foreground[s] the rights of colonial and postcolonial subjects and realise[s] the emancipatory potential of international law’.Footnote 46
A second substantive thread that is woven through several articles relates to the archival absences, fraught histories and false universalisms of international law.Footnote 47 Facing the ‘founding violence’ of the ‘archive of slavery’ – a source ‘inseparable from the play of power’ – Saidiya Hartmann asks: is it ‘possible to exceed or negotiate the constitutive limits of the archive?’Footnote 48 Can we ‘displace the received or authorized account?’Footnote 49 How to ‘topple the hierarchy of discourse, and to engulf authorized speech in the clash of voices?’Footnote 50 The stakes of these questions are significant in the field of international law: inclusions and erasures in the historical record create an existential cut between which voices matter and which voices are excluded from mattering.Footnote 51 This is particularly prescient, for instance, in relation to international law’s positivist doctrine of sources and the narrow categories of international legal subjectivity it engenders and invokes.Footnote 52 If B. S. Chimni pleads for an extension of this jurisgenerative ensemble – invoking Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade’s opinio juris communis – this can be read as a renegotiation of international law’s constitutive archive: to engulf international law’s authorized sources in the clash of subaltern voices, and topple the hierarchies of its canonical discourse.Footnote 53
Efforts to exceed, renegotiate or displace international law’s established archives, sites and sources are at the heart of the inspiring contributions to the symposium by W. L. Cheah and Idriss Fofana. In ‘Reconsidering “Sook Ching” Victimhood: A Microhistory of Singapore’s Nishimura Trial’, Cheah explores the ‘the cross-disciplinary methodological potential of TWAIL and microhistory’.Footnote 54 TWAIL scholarship, she cautions, tends to be directed towards ‘macro-history’ which might eclipse precisely the contextual impact of international law on the ‘under-represented and disempowered’ that micro-histories can capture.Footnote 55 The article applies this approach to a specific historical instance of post-war justice – the Singapore ‘Sook Ching’ trial or Nishimura trial – by focusing on the trial experiences of three specific individuals: a prosecutor appointed by the Chinese community, a former Japanese spy/prosecution witness, and a survivor/prosecution witness. While the trial is traditionally perceived as responding to the demands for justice by an abstract category of Chinese victimhood – in light of the arbitrary massacre of Chinese residents by the Japanese military during the Second World War – this revealing micro-historical investigation complicates this category of victimhood, simultaneously resisting the lure of idealized victimization,Footnote 56 and restoring the agency of subaltern voices confronted with post-war conditions of colonial rule with which international law was intertwined.Footnote 57 The insights of this revealing article emerge from a methodological approach that does not foreground authorized archives and accounts but follows ‘slender records’, ‘banal details’ and ‘documentary fragments’ – an attempt at reading trial transcripts against the grain.Footnote 58 What emerges from this original account is not only an enriched and nuanced perspective on victim agency and contested identity formation in this particular post-war context but also an important methodological intervention on how to work around ‘the blank spaces of [international law’s] historical record’ and retrieve the voices and lives of those ‘deemed unworthy of remembering’ without invoking shortcuts, clichés or sentimental tropes.Footnote 59
In ‘The Two Faces of Franco-Sudanian Treaties: The Peripheral Practice of Ratification as Evidence of Transregional International Law in the Nineteenth Century’,Footnote 60 Idriss Fofana equally aims to ‘exceed or negotiate the constitutive limits of the archive’ in relation to international law’s late nineteenth century development.Footnote 61 It is a common theme in TWAIL scholarship that this archive of international law – as reflected, for example, in the sources of custom formation – is skewed towards the West.Footnote 62 Idriss’s groundbreaking empirical research shows that this is not only related to the origin and availability of legal sources but also to how these sources have subsequently been translated, transposed, interpreted, formalized and handed over. The imperial tenor of late nineteenth century Euro-African treaties, he argues, results at least in part from the removal of these treaties from their ‘original interpretive context and their subjection to a distinct and increasingly hegemonic mode of interpretation that rendered African legal arguments inaudible’.Footnote 63 In response to these erasures, Idriss revisits the archive to ‘excavate African perspectives … [b]y focusing on markers of translation, transcription, and negotiation left on different copies of treaties’.Footnote 64 This methodological approach – described as translingual, intertextual and contextual – works with multiple copies of treaties as ‘differentiated records of the “social life” of treaties, records bearing the marks of a diplomatic agreement’s evolution and transmission between textual and oral forms and across languages’.Footnote 65 In doing so, it provides an original account of African agency – cabined, of course, by colonial conditions of violence and coercion yet not reducible to the passive participation in imperial legal imaginations that prior historical work tends to highlight. This inquiry foregrounds a specific set of actors – African polyglots and diplomatic agents – as central to the mediation of international treaties and the formation of Western Sudanian legal concepts. It is by focusing on this ‘peripheral practice’ of international lawmaking ‘among a culturally and politically diverse group of polities spanning a vast region’, Idriss argues, that we see the divergent emergence, application and interpretation of legal norms across autonomous ‘inter-polity normative orders’ – a series of constitutive contradictions as a ‘design feature’ of international law.Footnote 66 While this argument shows the central role of international law in the colonial consolidation of territorial sovereignty and histories of imperial rivalry, it also traces the different perspectives that lingered in its inter-polity mediation and how these were erased by re-interpretating treaties in a ‘Western and imperial frame’.Footnote 67
A third substantive thread links with postcolonial critiques on international law’s modernist ontology and its modalities of subject-making and recognition.Footnote 68 Grafted on nature-culture and subject-object separations characteristic of modern Western thought,Footnote 69 international law is hereby seen as complicit in the agential separation of the human subject from its many material entanglements.Footnote 70 This entails both an erasure of ‘aspects of the world that have been denied agency, subjectivity and vitality’,Footnote 71 and an interpellation of subjects as abstract liberal rights holders that dismisses material hierarchies and more-than-human relationships.Footnote 72 In ‘Re-thinking International Law Along with Amazonian Ontologies: Problematising Human-Non-Human Divisions’,Footnote 73 Cristina Blanco suspends this ontological framework in international law by foregrounding the perspectives of the Amazonian Kukama-Kukamiria people. Developing a methodological approach inspired by the ‘ontological turn’ in anthropology,Footnote 74 Cristina traces the ‘Kukama-Kukamiria cosmovision of the river’ to question and critique international law’s ‘underlying assumptions … about the natural world’.Footnote 75 The article portrays this clash in cosmovisions specifically related to the Amazon Waterway (Hidrovía Amazónica) infrastructure project promoted by the Peruvian state and vehemently opposed by the Kukama people. Drawing on original interview material, Cristina shows that the conflict does not merely instantiate indigenous resistance against the developmental drive of international law,Footnote 76 but flows from a deeper disjunction in how nature-culture relationships are perceived and enacted. The article thereby invites us to ‘(re)think[] international law along with the Amazonia’, which ‘implies not only being situated in a geographically different place’ but also on an ‘ontologically different’ plane – to think ‘with the periphery of the periphery’.Footnote 77 In the cosmovision of the Kukama people that ‘the river encompasses spirits that inhabit “objects” like quirumas’ (which the Amazon Waterway sought to erase), we find an ‘interference’ with international law’s portrayal of ‘nature’.Footnote 78 The article invites us to rethink international law by opening up to these ‘indigenous worldviews’ without romanticized idealization – to engage with expressions of multinaturalism rather than multiculturalism or multinationalism.Footnote 79 Inspired by TWAIL scholarship, it thereby aims to capture and contest international law’s colonial continuities on an ontological level.
A fourth substantive thread that is woven through this symposium is the focus on international law’s institutional and professional biases in relation to the Global South.Footnote 80 In ‘Under the Shadow of Legality: A Shadow Hauntology on the Legal Construction of the Women, Peace and Security Agenda’,Footnote 81 Juliana Santos de Carvalho focuses on the Security Council Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda and lingers with the intriguing irresolvability of its legal status. Rather than lamenting these ambiguities, she foregrounds the ‘different, deviant, and contrasting projects and imageries of legality’ present in feminist politics and their ‘disrupting capabilities’.Footnote 82 The article thereby builds on Avery Gordon’s insights on ‘what it means to take seriously the shadows (or ghosts) that haunt our social and material realities as well as our production of knowledge’.Footnote 83 What unfolds is an original ‘shadow hauntology’ of legal mobilization that traces ‘how gender power and coloniality … arranged the room whereby legality was a secondary, if not inexistent, concern for feminist activists’.Footnote 84 Aligned with the inspiring argument by Renske Vos about the agency of absence,Footnote 85 this perspective traces the WPS agenda as a ‘productive shadow in international law-making: one that makes its [legal] mark by being there and not there at the same time’.Footnote 86 Yet, these feminist activist encounters with international law, Juliana shows, confronted existing power structures as the WPS agenda became entangled with the racial and imperial tensions of the post 9/11 security paradigm. With a crucial methodological gesture, Juliana writes herself into this powerful story of international law’s shadows – a personal phenomenology of race and class-based exclusions and disciplinary limitations. Yet, as all pieces in this symposium, it also provides us promising pathways for transgressing those: a mode of theorizing ‘from the break’.Footnote 87