breaking news, the new issue of your favorite journal is out and as per the ushe it is 🔥🔥🔥
academic.oup.com/lril/issue/1...
@torkrever.bsky.social
Writer and legal academic. International law, critical and Marxist legal theory.
breaking news, the new issue of your favorite journal is out and as per the ushe it is 🔥🔥🔥
academic.oup.com/lril/issue/1...
Closing out the issue is the Medellín Group's manifesto on transnational value chains and international law, setting out a research agenda that treats GVCs as amorphous and transnational legal creatures.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Sasha Crawford-Holland, @patrickbriansmith.bsky.social, and Andrew Williams look at open-source investigation and propose tactics to counter epistemic injustice aimed at fostering pluralistic, decentralised, and solidarity-based OSI practices.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Security Council Resolutions, Wouter Werner argues, are drafted like autobiographical stories. Comparing them with the plays of Samuel Beckett, he examines the rules of genre and tradition and how the Council presents itself to its readers.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Next, Gavin Sullivan explores the challenges security infrastructures pose by following the hash-sharing database of the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism and suggests new possibilities for the study of global algorithmic infrastructures in action.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Using EH Carr’s work as a lens, @ingovenzke.bsky.social delves into the dissonances between aims and inaction in the climate regime and repositions international law as a mobilising force in transnational climate movements.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Focusing on the rubber boats used by irregular migrants on the Mediterranean Sea, Tanja Aalberts uses the heuristic of transnational legal encounters to investigate the enactment of law as a concrete event within a complex transnational force field.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Our new issue of the London Review of International Law is out with articles by Tanja Aalberts, @ingovenzke.bsky.social, Gavin Sullivan, Wouter Werner, Sasha Crawford-Holland, @patrickbriansmith.bsky.social, Andrew Williams, and the Medellín Group.
academic.oup.com/lril/issue/1...
Against the erasure of this tradition, I call for a recovery of silenced histories of radicalism and anti-imperial thought and of a tradition that still offers resources for an emancipatory politics grounded in a critique of international law, imperialism and global capitalism.
29.05.2025 11:23 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0I argue that a Marxist theory of imperialism was an important influence on anti-colonial political thought, while also shaping radical Third World lawyers’ attitudes towards the relationship between international law and imperialism and the uses and limits of the former.
29.05.2025 11:23 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0Despite growing interest in the international legal history of decolonisation, significant elisions remain. Through a reading of recent engagements with that history, I argue that they contribute to an erasure of the Marxist tradition in the history of the Third World movement.
29.05.2025 11:23 — 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0Glad to see this article now out. Part of a special issue on the history of international law, I write on, and against, the erasure of the Marxist tradition in the international legal history of decolonisation.
brill.com/view/journal...
In Cambridge, in my way to the spectacular conference by @norajaber.bsky.social and @torkrever.bsky.social on the juridification of justice
… but I might stop for a picnic first.
www.lcil.cam.ac.uk/press/events...
having spoken to friends and comrades who are both anxious about travelling to the US for the LSA, and unable to withdraw for a number of reasons, we have drafted this letter.
docs.google.com/forms/d/1O2F...
Closing the symposium, @afolkers.bsky.social and Nadine Marquardt trace the emergence of ‘the planetary’ and ‘responsibility’ and argue that different ways in which the planet presents itself as a problem also change the meaning of responsibility.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Andrew Lang offers a reading of ‘market-based sustainability governance’ as a reflexive governance form, drawing particular inspiration from the work of Anna Tsing and Donna Haraway.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
In his article, @avastmachine.bsky.social explores failures and weaknesses of governance modes, arguing that the most effective climate ‘policy’ is infrastructural change.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Reading the public statements of governments and political leaders, Thomas Scheffer reconstructs the emergence of climate policy, climate law, and a global climate regime, as well as the multiple struggles and inevitable gaps along the way.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
In her article, @naomioreskes.bsky.social looks at obstacles to climate action and in particular political power, anchoring effects and futuristic framing, and ‘techno-fideism’, an unreasonable faith in technology to solve social and political problems.
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Hans-Jörg Rheinberger's essay is an homage to the late Michel Serres, focusing on his book The Natural Contract: 'Serres was a pioneer of the Anthropocene before the term had come into use.'
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Alain Pottage introduces the symposium, which emerges from a conference organised with @stephenlse.bsky.social in 2021
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
In our new issue of the London Review of International Law, a symposium on planetary responsibility with contributions from Alain Pottage, Hans-Jörg Rheinberger, @naomioreskes.bsky.social, Thomas Scheffer,
@avastmachine.bsky.social, Andrew Lang, @afolkers.bsky.social and Nadine Marquardt.
Paywall-free version here:
www.academia.edu/127339558/Li...
I was asked by @cambridgecria.bsky.social to write about @itallgren.bsky.social's Portraits of Women in International Law.
A short essay on the limits of the Portrait, via John Berger:
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
The full, original collection in English is here:
academic.oup.com/lril/article...
Earlier this year we published a collection of short reflections on Gaza and international law in the London Review of International Law. Some have now been translated and published in Arabic in the latest issue of the Madar Center's Qadaya Isra’iliyya.
www.madarcenter.org/%D9%85%D8%AC...
Our London Review of International Law Annual Lecture will be delivered this year by Susan Marks.
'Trucanini’s Stare', Thursday 21 November, 6.30pm at LSE (MAR 1.08)
lselaw.events/event/london...