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The rebirth of territory

Part of the Cambridge studies in international and comparative law series
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The concept of territory is central in international law, but a detailed analysis of how the concept is used in both discourse and practice has been lacking until now.

Rather than reproducing the established understanding of territoriality within the international legal order, this study suggests that the discipline of international law relies on an outmoded spatial paradigm.

Gail Lythgoe argues for a complete update and overhaul of our understanding of territory and space, to engage more effectively with key processes, structures and actors relevant to contemporary global governance.

In this new theoretical account of an essential aspect of public international law, she argues that territory is a dynamic social reality created by the exercise of power.

Territories are constituted by the practices of a more diverse array of actors than is acknowledged.

As a result, functions are re-assembling in territories constituted by state and non-state actors alike.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009377906 / 9781009377904
eBook (EPUB)
341.42
14/03/2024
200 pages
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