729 research outputs found

    What is critique? Towards a sociology of disciplinary heterodoxy in contemporary international law

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    International law and the poststructuralist challenge

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    The horizontal mechanism initiative in the WTO: the proceduralist turn and its discontents

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    CLS and Marxism: a history of an affair

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    This essay explores the relationship between the Critical Legal Studies movement and the Marxist tradition. What role did Marxism play in the formation of CLS's ideological and theoretical horizons? What part was it assigned in the movement's symbolic economy of discursive projects and practices? What kinds of critical challenges did CLS scholars mount against the Marxist legal-theoretic tradition and what sorts of broader lessons can the Marxist tradition extract today from those criticisms? The essay starts by summarising the standard account of the relationship between CLS and Marxism that has historically developed within the CLS's own internal discourse. It problematises a number of basic assumptions underlying this account before turning its attention to the examination of CLS's (potential) contribution to the development of a new wave of the Marxist legal-theoretic enterprise

    Central Asia as an object of Orientalist narratives in the Age of Bandung

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    Writing about empire: remarks on the logic of a discourse

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    A new genre of scholarly writing has emerged in recent years in the field of what one can broadly call critical international theory. Its principal defining feature is an intense preoccupation with the phenomenon of the so-called ‘new world order’, which it tries to explain and describe through an analytical lens constructed primarily around two ideas: the idea of ‘empire’ and the idea of ‘imperial law’. In this article I attempt to provide a brief overview of this genre, which for the sake of simplicity I shall call henceforth the ‘new imperial law’ or NIL genre, and to reflect critically on its underlying ideological dynamics
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