New Voices: A Selection from the Second Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law
Abstract
Conventionally, self-determination is understood to have evolved in a linear progression from a political principle during <it>World War I</it> into an international right after World War II. The history of the right to self-determination before 1945 is thus part of ‘pre-history’. This article explores that ‘pre-history’ and finds the conventional linear narrative unconvincing. During the first three decades of the 20th century and in particular during the interwar period, non-Western lawyers, politicians, and activists articulated international law claims to support the demand for self-government. In this process, they appropriated and transformed the international law discourse. Removing the legal obstacles that prevented self-government beyond the West – that is, by eliminating the standard of civilization – interwar semi-peripherals made possible the emergence of a right to self-determination later, when the international political context changed after the second post-war reconstruction of international law.
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