1st Edition
International Law and Posthuman Theory
List of Contributors ix
Preface by Rosi Braidotti xii
Introduction to International Law and Posthuman
Theory 1
Emily Jones and Matilda Arvidsson
PART 1
Methodological and Theoretical Frontiers 29
1 Posthuman Feminism as a Theoretical and Methodological Approach to International Law 31
Matilda Arvidsson
2 Flat Ontology and Differentiation: In Defense of Bennett’s Vital Materialism, and Some Thoughts Toward Decolonial New Materialisms for International Law 60
Anna Grear
3 Aesthetics, New Materialism and Legal Matter: The ‘Art’ of Anglo-American Colonialism 83
Delaney Mitchell
4 The Common Heritage of Kin-Kind 105
Emily Jones, Cristian van Eijk and Gina Heathcote
PART 2
Political Economy, History and Colonialism 137
5 A Monument to E.G. Wakefield: New and Historical Materialist Dialogues for a Posthuman International Law 139
Jessie Hohmann and Christine Schwobel-Patel
6 Neither National nor International: A Posthumanist Retelling of Tax Sovereignty 161
Hedvig Larka
7 After Homo Narrans: Botany, International Law and Senegambia in Early Racial Capitalist Worldmaking 180
Vanja Hamzić
PART 3
The Environment and the Nonhuman 201
8 Terraqueous Feminisms and the International Law of the Sea 203
Gina Heathcote
9 Becoming Common – Ecological Resistance, Refusal, Reparation 222
Marie Petersmann
10 The War on Drugs as the War on the Nonhuman 244
Kojo Koram and Oscar Guardiola-Rivera
11 Supplanting Anthropocentric Legalities: Can the Rule of Law Tolerate Intensive Animal Agriculture? 258
Maneesha Deckha
12 Will Human Rights Save the Anthropos from the Anthropocene? Rights-Based Environmental Protection Strategies and Posthuman Theory 279
Jasmijn Leeuwenkamp
Index 305
Biography
Matilda Arvidsson is Associate Professor in International Law and Assistant Senior Lecturer in Jurisprudence at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Emily Jones is an NUAcT Fellow based at Newcastle Law School, Newcastle University, UK.
“How do ‘we’ move beyond the Eurocentric, hetrosexist and humanistic binds of international law? As much critical scholarship has demonstrated, it is not through more law. This wide-ranging collection, written by some of the most exciting thinkers of international law and posthumanism, provides readers with ways of thinking otherwise – ways out of the binds. This is critique as hope.” Maria Elander, La Trobe University, Australia
"The chapters of this book offer, each in their specific manner and through different angles, multi-directional answers, provide examples and illustrations of what is at stake. They share one, empowering belief, which I take as axiomatic, namely that posthuman legal thought aims to critique the humanistic, Eurocentric, normative and heterosexist core of legal theory and practice, in order to make it more inclusive and less discriminatory. In so doing, they make room for the non-human, more-than-human entities, agents and subjects of our posthuman times. The intertwined critiques of humanism and anthropocentrism serve to illuminate contemporary patterns of power, subjugation, injustice and exploitation. And to offer ways out." Rosi Braidotti, Utrecht University, the Netherlands.






