International law and hegemony: A reconfiguration

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Abstract

Instead of appearing as a stable set of normative demands opposed to international politics, international law is better understood as an aspect of hegemonic contestation, a technique of articulating political claims in terms of legal rights and duties. The controversies in the law concerning the use of force, the law of peace, human rights, trade and globalisation reflect strategies through which political actors seek to make their preferences appear to be universal ones. But the legal idiom also contains a utopian aspect: it distances political actors from their idiosyncratic preferences and thus creates the international world as a legal community in the act of invoking it. © 2004, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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APA

Koskenniemi, M. (2004). International law and hegemony: A reconfiguration. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 17(2), 197–218. https://doi.org/10.1080/0955757042000245852

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