
Contents
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I. From Being to Having I. From Being to Having
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II. Poverty, Development, and the Medium of International Law II. Poverty, Development, and the Medium of International Law
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III. From Sovereign States to Sovereign Communities: from Domination to Commons III. From Sovereign States to Sovereign Communities: from Domination to Commons
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IV. The Commons Alternative: towards an Ecology of International Law IV. The Commons Alternative: towards an Ecology of International Law
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39 From Poverty and Development to People’s International Law
Get accessUgo Mattei, Professor, UC Hastings College of the Law
Margot E. Salomon, Associate Professor, Law School, London School of Economics and Political Science
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Published:18 December 2023
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Abstract
Poverty is the direct consequence of property accumulation masked by the rhetoric of growth, development, and shared prosperity. International law has played a decisive role in the design of this schema, as a powerful engine for the transformation of commons into capital. This chapter undresses international law, exposing it as a depoliticised technology that has served as a powerful transnational vehicle to globalise exploitive practices of humans and commons. The chapter posits that nothing less than a critique of the phenomenology of international law and its substitution with a commons-based approach to institutions will allow the poor to recover. From there this work presents the commons alternative, a turning away from the logic of domination and consumption, and a repatriation of the law to sovereign communities and the conditions under which a new and legitimate people’s international law can emerge.
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