This lecture, inaugurating a lecture series in honour of Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, looks at the changing place of geography in the international system and the challenges that this poses to international law, from the central place of geography in the Westphalian legal order to its less certain place in the rapidly globalizing and diffuse international society of the present day. Examining these issues through the contrasting prisms of the principal political organs of the United Nations in New York, on the one hand, and the UN Specialized Agencies centred in Geneva, on the other, the lecture also explores these issues by reference to Thomas Friedman's thesis that The World Is Flat. The lecture concludes by identifying a number of areas of international law, and the international legal system, that will require creative thinking in the period to come to reflect the diminishing importance of geography. © The Author, 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of EJIL Ltd. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Bethlehem, D. (2014). The end of geography: The changing nature of the international system and the challenge to international law. European Journal of International Law, 25(1), 9–24. https://doi.org/10.1093/ejil/chu003
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