Book review : New Approaches to International Law: The History of a Project
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Tzouvala, Ntina
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
Reflecting upon critical international scholarship and its evolution through time, this review essay
focuses on a volume co-edited by José María Beneyto and David Kennedy, along with assistant
editors, Justo Corti Varela and John Haskell, on the history of the new approaches to international law (NAIL) and the work of David Kennedy. Considering the individual contributions to
this book, this essay argues that while the influence of NAIL upon younger scholars, critical or
‘mainstream’, is beyond contestation, it is questionable to what extent the intellectual priorities
and institutional anxieties of the discipline (should) remain the same. Drawing heavily on the
theme of professional responsibility that underlies most of the contributions to this volume, this
essay proposes a re-orientation of critical inquiry in the light of the implication of international
law and institutions in the 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath. Echoing Kennedy’s call to
engage with questions of political economy and global governance, this review essay suggests
that for critical international law to reclaim its radical and innovative character, it is imperative
to engage with the concerns of a post-crash world and to identify and disrupt the role of international law in the constitution of an unstable and unjust international economic order
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European Journal of International Law
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Restricted until
2099-12-31