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Interference in Sovereign Affairs and the Discursive Economy of International Law: Developments in International Law, cartea 81

Autor Frédéric Mégret
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 apr 2025
Interference in sovereign affairs is seemingly everywhere but nowhere at the same time. Whether it is pressure on or corruption of public officials, conditionality in development assistance, criticism of one’s human rights record, psychological or propaganda operations, instrumentalization of diasporas, international organization supervision or meddling diplomats, the phenomenon is as amorphous as it is diffuse. But what if it was the lens that we use to capture interference that was the problem? How do the tools we use in international law blind us to the reality of certain phenomena? The urgency of understanding interference on its terms has never been greater, and it requires nothing less than a reimagining of the sort of discursive investments on which international law rests.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004532724
ISBN-10: 9004532722
Pagini: 545
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Developments in International Law


Notă biografică

Frédéric Mégret is a Full Professor and holds the Hans & Tamar Oppenheimer Chair in Public International Law at the Faculty of Law, McGill University. His work lies at the intersection of international law, legal theory and history, and human rights.

Cuprins

Acknowledgement

Introduction: The World-Making Character of Interference and Non-interference
1 What It Means to ‘Constitute’

2 The Rule of Non-intervention, the Practice of Interference

3 The ‘New Interference’ and International Law


Part 1
Interference and Non-interference: A Short History
1 Non-interference’s Conditions of Possibility

2 Non-interference and State Building

3 Historicizing Interference and Non-interference

1The Emergence of Non-interference as a Norm in International Law
1 Introduction
1.1The Relative Early Irrelevance of Non-intervention

1.2The Rise of Non-intervention as a Concern

1.3Recognitions of Insurgency, Belligerency, Governments and New States


2 Interference within Non-interference and the Paradoxical Logic of Spheres
2.1From the Monroe Doctrine to the Roosevelt Corollary

2.2The Brezhnev Doctrine and Socialist Internationalism

2.3An International Normalization?


3 Deprovincializing Non-interference? Cosmopolitanization and the Role of Human Rights
3.1The Helsinki Conference as Formative Episode

3.2Between Humanitarianism and droits-de-l’hommisme

3.3A Droit d’Ingérence?


4 Push-Back: The Third-World Attempt at Sanctification of Non-interference
4.1From the Americas to the United Nations

4.2The Emerging International Legal Formalization of Non-interference

4.3The Continuing Fate of Non-interference


2The Rise of the ‘New’ Interference
1 Introduction

2 The End of the Cold War and the Uncertain Fate of Interference
2.1Renewed Interference?

2.2Renewed Pushback?

2.3The Rise of the Anti-Interference State


3 Blowback: Revenge of the South?
3.1‘Off Script’ Interference

3.2The Reversal of Interference Fluxes

3.3Benign or Malign?


4 Late International Legal Anxieties
4.1New Provenance

4.2New Targets

4.3New Means



Part 2
The Age of Interference: Questions for International Law
1 Non-interference as Argumentative Claim

2 The Framing Role of International Law

3 The Distinctiveness of Interference

3Prodding the Breadth and Depth of the Evolving Domaine Réservé: What Is Left?
1 Introduction: Ceci N’est Pas Un Domaine Réservé …
1.1Essence, Residue or Practice?

1.2The Many Facets of the Domaine Réservé

1.3The International Law of Jurisdiction as Approximation of the Domaine


2 Minimal State/Total State
2.1Mutations of Sovereignty

2.2The Attempted Sanctuarization of the Domestic Domain

2.3(Re)nationalizing Politics?


3 Human Rights/Democracy
3.1Do Human Rights Spell the End of the Domaine Réservé?

3.2Rehabilitating the ‘Human Rights State’

3.3Exceptionalizing Democracy?


4 National Self-determination/Global Values
4.1Self-determination: Impeding or Mandating Interference?

4.2Interference by Invitation?

4.3Self-Determination without Self-Determination?


4The Nature of Interference: What Does It Take?
1 Introduction
1.1The Policy Framing

1.2The Limits of Reasoning by Analogy

1.3Interference in the Shadow of Intervention?


2 Coercion/Disruption
2.1The Definitional Challenge

2.2Coercion and Its Limits

2.3Beyond Coercion?


3 Public/Private
3.1The Invisibility of Private Interference

3.2Issues of Attribution

3.3Beyond Attribution?


4 Unilateral/Supranational
4.1Foundations for the Permissibility of Internationally Justified Interference

4.2Justifying Interference: From Decolonization to Human Rights

4.3Can International Law Justify Interference?



Part 3
Strategic Dilemmas of Interference
1 The Function and Constraint of Arguments about Interference

2 The Curse of Mimetism, the Hope of Reciprocity

3 Defining the Conditions of International Engagement

5Engaging the Dilemmas of the Domestic and the International
1 Introduction
1.1Interference as Crisis

1.2Two Models

1.3International Law’s Calling?


2 Domestic v International Law?
2.1Privileging the Domestic

2.2The Relative Irrelevance of International Law

2.3The Unavoidability of International Law?


3 Horizontal v Vertical Interference?
3.1International Organizations’ Interference with Domestic Affairs

3.2The Distinctiveness of International Organizations’ Interference

3.3The Limited Relevance of International Organizations’ Interference for State Interference


4 International law v Human Rights?
4.1Pushing Back against Excessive Non-interference Agendas

4.2Human Rights: Buttressing the Case for Non-interference?

4.3The Problem of Stigmatizing Certain Populations


6Imagining a Baseline
1 Introduction

2 A Duty to Engage?
2.1The Liberal Acceptability of Non-engagement

2.2Questioning the Laissez Faire Bases of International Law

2.3Friendly Relations?


3 A Duty of Transparency?
3.1Demanding Truth

3.2Perfidy and the Requirement of Transparency

3.3The Limits of Transparency


4 A Duty of Consistency?
4.1Horizontal Consistency

4.2Vertical Consistency

4.3Beyond Consistency: On Seeing Oneself in the Mirror


Conclusion: Routinized Interference: The Unravelling of Sovereignty?
1 Reclaiming and Transcending the Ironies of Interference

2 Non-interference: Rule, Praxis or Ethos?

3 The Meaning of Interference for, Rather than in International Law


Index