Remoteness Reconsidered: The Atacama Desert and International Law
Autor Christopher Rossien Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 iul 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780472132577
ISBN-10: 0472132571
Pagini: 302
Ilustrații: 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
ISBN-10: 0472132571
Pagini: 302
Ilustrații: 5 maps
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Notă biografică
Christopher R. Rossi is Associate Professor of Political Science at UiT, The Arctic University of Norway, and an Associate Member of the Aurora Center at the Norwegian Center for the Law of the Sea.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Name Index
- Introduction
The Path of this Book
- Remoteness Generally Reconsidered
Elements of Remoteness
Temporal Remoteness and the Problem of Periodization
International Law’s Struggle with Remoteness and Periodization
Two Current Problems: Globalization and the Anthropocene
Geographic Remoteness
Territorializing Remoteness
Lines and Maps
Doctrinal Remoteness
Temporal Remoteness and the Problem of Periodization
International Law’s Struggle with Remoteness and Periodization
Two Current Problems: Globalization and the Anthropocene
Geographic Remoteness
Territorializing Remoteness
Lines and Maps
Doctrinal Remoteness
Demarginalizing the Desert
Conclusion
- Nomos
Carl Schmitt and Nomos
The Dynamics of Biogeography
Spanish Incursions into the Atacama
The Dynamics of Biogeography
Spanish Incursions into the Atacama
- Guano and Nitrates
The War of the Pacific
- Water
The Source of the Riparian Dispute
A Deep History of Tension
Psychological Effects of the War of the Pacific and Goffmanian Metaphor
The Importance of Metaphors and International Law
Dramaturgy
Ceremonial Profanations and Legal Vandalism
The Evolution of Transboundary Fresh Water Law
Evolution of the International Law Defining Watercourse
The Watercourse Convention
A Clash of Interests: Sovereignty versus Watercourse Integrity
The Doctrine of International Servitude
The Absolute View: The Harmon Doctrine
The Restrictive Theory of Prior Rights
Rise of Equitable Use and Mutual Accord: A Community of Interests?
Conclusion
A Deep History of Tension
Psychological Effects of the War of the Pacific and Goffmanian Metaphor
The Importance of Metaphors and International Law
Dramaturgy
Ceremonial Profanations and Legal Vandalism
The Evolution of Transboundary Fresh Water Law
Evolution of the International Law Defining Watercourse
The Watercourse Convention
A Clash of Interests: Sovereignty versus Watercourse Integrity
The Doctrine of International Servitude
The Absolute View: The Harmon Doctrine
The Restrictive Theory of Prior Rights
Rise of Equitable Use and Mutual Accord: A Community of Interests?
Conclusion
- Lithium
Competing Perspectives
Chile’s Economic Transition and ‘Lost Decade’
The Chicago Boys
Bolivia and Dependency Theory: The Antipode
Bolivia’s Alternative View of Extractivism
Lingering Effects of Bolivia’s Postcolonial Encounter
Bolivia’s Fitful Relation to Neoliberalism
Argentina and Neoliberalism
Conclusion
Chile’s Economic Transition and ‘Lost Decade’
The Chicago Boys
Bolivia and Dependency Theory: The Antipode
Bolivia’s Alternative View of Extractivism
Lingering Effects of Bolivia’s Postcolonial Encounter
Bolivia’s Fitful Relation to Neoliberalism
Argentina and Neoliberalism
Conclusion
- The Spatial Turn, Extractivism, and Remoteness
Name Index
Recenzii
A remarkably insightful interdisciplinary study interpreting how a remote region like the Atacama Desert becomes part of the global economy, and showcasing the role that International Law plays and will continue to play in that process. Richard Francaviglia, author of Imagining the Atacama Desert: A Five-Hundred
Remoteness Reconsidered is an eye-opening contribution to the spatial history of international law. Christopher Rossi has shown how the importance of the Atacama Desert has been neglected from colonial cartography to contemporary neoliberal policies, revealing why dominant views of remoteness merit to be revised by international lawyers and IR scholars.
A spatial, critical-geographic perspective on international law and its operationUsing the trope of 'remoteness,' Rossi offers both an original conceptual interrogation as well as a critical topography of one particular place the Atacama Desert.
"Rossi integrates multiple disciplines in the examination of [remoteness's] centrality in transboundary disputes and conflicts, using the Atacama as the trope."
Remoteness Reconsidered is an eye-opening contribution to the spatial history of international law. Christopher Rossi has shown how the importance of the Atacama Desert has been neglected from colonial cartography to contemporary neoliberal policies, revealing why dominant views of remoteness merit to be revised by international lawyers and IR scholars.
A spatial, critical-geographic perspective on international law and its operationUsing the trope of 'remoteness,' Rossi offers both an original conceptual interrogation as well as a critical topography of one particular place the Atacama Desert.
"Rossi integrates multiple disciplines in the examination of [remoteness's] centrality in transboundary disputes and conflicts, using the Atacama as the trope."