Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law

The financial crash of 2007-2008 brought words like ‘capitalism’, ‘capital’, and ‘socialism’ back in vogue. However, the discipline of international law remains to reflect systematically on its relationship with the ways in which wealth and power are produced and distributed. This thesis examines th...

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Main Author: Tzouvala, Konstantina
Published: Durham University 2016
Subjects:
341
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695030
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6950302018-04-04T03:38:47ZLetters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international lawTzouvala, Konstantina2016The financial crash of 2007-2008 brought words like ‘capitalism’, ‘capital’, and ‘socialism’ back in vogue. However, the discipline of international law remains to reflect systematically on its relationship with the ways in which wealth and power are produced and distributed. This thesis examines the relationship between international law, imperialism and capitalism through historical lenses, arguing that the diffusion of capitalist relations is a core function of international law. Analysing the nineteenth-century ‘standard of civilisation’, I contend that transforming (semi)colonised polities into centralised, territorialised states operating as guarantors of capitalist relations of production was at the core of the concept. Extraterritoriality in Japan and the Ottoman Empire serves as a case study to verify this statement and to highlight the transformative functions of the ‘civilising mission’. The Mandates System of the League of Nations established a system of partial internationalisation of this transformative process, while attempting to safeguard the long-term interests of capital through the introduction of limited forms of welfarism. My thesis then argues that decolonisation assumed the form of national statehood due to the transformative functions of nineteenth-century international law. Therefore, the attempt to push for a New International Economic Order was both a challenge to contemporary international law and a reaffirmation of its role in promoting capitalist relations on a global level. These reformist attempts did not succeed, however, and a new model of capitalist accumulation, neoliberalism, became hegemonic after 1990. The quantitative expansion and qualitative refinement of international law during that period was intrinsically linked to the neoliberal aversion to democratic and mass politics. The neoliberal reconstruction of Iraq in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion is interpreted in the light of this reality. In so doing, my thesis highlights the ongoing synergies between international law and capitalist expansion.341Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695030http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11806/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 341
spellingShingle 341
Tzouvala, Konstantina
Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
description The financial crash of 2007-2008 brought words like ‘capitalism’, ‘capital’, and ‘socialism’ back in vogue. However, the discipline of international law remains to reflect systematically on its relationship with the ways in which wealth and power are produced and distributed. This thesis examines the relationship between international law, imperialism and capitalism through historical lenses, arguing that the diffusion of capitalist relations is a core function of international law. Analysing the nineteenth-century ‘standard of civilisation’, I contend that transforming (semi)colonised polities into centralised, territorialised states operating as guarantors of capitalist relations of production was at the core of the concept. Extraterritoriality in Japan and the Ottoman Empire serves as a case study to verify this statement and to highlight the transformative functions of the ‘civilising mission’. The Mandates System of the League of Nations established a system of partial internationalisation of this transformative process, while attempting to safeguard the long-term interests of capital through the introduction of limited forms of welfarism. My thesis then argues that decolonisation assumed the form of national statehood due to the transformative functions of nineteenth-century international law. Therefore, the attempt to push for a New International Economic Order was both a challenge to contemporary international law and a reaffirmation of its role in promoting capitalist relations on a global level. These reformist attempts did not succeed, however, and a new model of capitalist accumulation, neoliberalism, became hegemonic after 1990. The quantitative expansion and qualitative refinement of international law during that period was intrinsically linked to the neoliberal aversion to democratic and mass politics. The neoliberal reconstruction of Iraq in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion is interpreted in the light of this reality. In so doing, my thesis highlights the ongoing synergies between international law and capitalist expansion.
author Tzouvala, Konstantina
author_facet Tzouvala, Konstantina
author_sort Tzouvala, Konstantina
title Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
title_short Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
title_full Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
title_fullStr Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
title_full_unstemmed Letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
title_sort letters of blood and fire : a socio-economic history of international law
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695030
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