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Trigueño International Law: On (Most of) the World Being (Always, Somehow) Out of Place

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posted on 2024-12-12, 04:27 authored by Luis EslavaLuis Eslava

The chapter builds an “out of place” theory for international law. The author, Luis Eslava, a scholar of international law and development, draws on postcolonial legal theory, history, and ethnographic research in Colombia and elsewhere to show how the field of international law produces and is produced by “out-of-placeness.” The result is an international legal order that has, for five hundred years, “continually wrecked and disciplined” people and places, especially in the Global South. Eslava points scholars towards seeing that being out of place is fundamentally about dislocation, which is both a global reality and a sensible ethical position for contemporary interdisciplinary scholarship.

History

Publication Date

2024-02-22

Book Title

Out of Place: Fieldwork and Positionality in Law and Society

Editors

Chua LJ Massoud MF

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Place of publication

Cambridge

Edition

1

Pagination

28p. (p. 160-187)

ISBN-13

9781009338219

Rights Statement

© © Lynette J. Chua and Mark Fathi Massoud 2024. This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0: https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

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