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Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law. By Antony Anghie. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. 378. $110.00 cloth.

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Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law. By Antony Anghie. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. 378. $110.00 cloth.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Leslye Obiora*
Affiliation:
University of Arizona
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2006 Law and Society Association.

Anghie posits imperial interests as the crucible for the improvisation of the norms, structures, and processes that constitute the international rule of law. Identifying the seminal works of Francisco de Vitoria as a watershed that engendered juridical techniques and institutions manifestly appropriated as license to live by plunder, he copiously depicts the chameleonic persistence of Vitorian epochs belied by rituals of innovation in the international legal framework. Exploring the politics that inform the complex of rules refereeing what entities are sovereign and ascribing relevant powers (p. 16), Anghie analyzes the doctrine of sovereignty not merely as a fetish albeit impotent to fetter imperialism, but precisely as a simple expedient contrived to entrench colonial exploitations. Addressing the intimate connection between the doctrine and the question of culture, the author critiques the construction of sovereignty as the intrinsic preserve of a racialized elite simultaneously vested with the prerogative to arbitrate the ripeness (or lack thereof) of competing entities for induction.

In a similar vein, Anghie invokes an array of vivid arguments to demonstrate the contemporary significance of the self-sustaining exclusions that inaugurated the jurisprudential resources of international law as a strategy of European imperialism. Illuminating the ideological and material constraints that predetermine dominations and the dependencies that thwart the substantive self-determination of third world states, he illustrates the incoherence of the axiom of sovereign equality and its corollaries as models of universal applicability. Underscoring a constellation of fictions that reinforce the disparate integration of the third world into the global order, the author chronicles a genius of creativity that legitimizes and perpetuates imperialism as a pervasive constant. Dissecting iterations of the colonial encounter as fossils with discernible imprints of historical shifts in the global political economy that incubate perennial inequities, Anghie draws on the Mandate System to exemplify the genesis of egregious extremities that precipitated the Rwandan carnage (p. 191). The instructiveness of Anghie's insight into the profound influence of the global political economy on localized violence falters in light of the explanatory force he imputes to ethnicity and racial determinism in lieu of rigorous attention to the objective conditions underlying conflict over resources (p. 206).

The work would have been further enriched had the author turned his piercing gaze to explore, animate, and engage the third world's agency in its own predicament. An undertone of the work suggests an unquestioning embrace of the passivity of the third world that is rather curious. Perhaps it is naïve to presume the viability of resistance in the face of uncompromising ambition or against imperialistic finesse fine-tuned through years of practice. Arguably, there is no shortage of substantive historical evidence to vindicate counterhegemonic acts that Anghie seems inclined to relegate to a passing note. Conceivably, robust attention to third world agency by way of resistance—or complicity for that matter—is not exactly consistent with a core thesis that foregrounds the arrogant certainty of hegemons whose machinations abound with impunity. However, the occlusion of or reticence about third world agency is not readily reconcilable with the author's assertion of the centrality of the colonial encounter to the ascendancy of sovereignty. By the same token, closer interrogation may well have demystified the self-diminution signified by the third world's apparent ratification of a regime Anghie painstakingly elucidates as a proxy for imperialism.

The enthusiasm that marked the inception of this review was especially tempered with disappointment about the author's teasing rhetorical maneuvers, spurious disclaimers, and incongruous symbolic gestures. In material respects, the work does not quite live up to its aspiration to showcase “alternative histories—histories of resistance to colonial powers, history from the vantage point of the peoples who were subjected to international law” (p. 8). For a body of work preoccupied with nuance in distinguishing its undertaking and potential contribution, the considered evisceration of international ethics atrophies into a tunnel vision that replicates a familiar pattern of ascribing omnipotence to the West. Anghie extensively suggests that the stakes that dictated and are safeguarded by the predication of international order on asymmetric binaries or “a dynamic of difference” inoculate against the evolution of an inclusive paradigm from the status quo. However, insofar as he highlights the transformative potential of historicizing particular formulations and privileges a space to reclaim and invigorate international law in the postcolonial world (p. 317), to construe his intervention solely as a critique of the bankruptcy of technologies of control and management that masquerade as international law is to deflate the incisiveness of his criticism and to decline his invitation to render the regime accountable. All things considered, Anghie's book is a thoroughgoing account that gives voice to sentiments that seldom see the light of day, let alone are adjudged worthy of dissemination by a prestigious press. The rereading of international law is a useful corrective to conventional perspectives that normalize subjugation and its rationalization by any means necessary.