Abstract
This essay charts the co-implication of the personal and the intellectual in the work of international legal thinker Krystyna Marek, a Polish exile who wrote in the context of the dissolution of empire in Eastern Europe. Marek’s 1954 book The Identity and Continuity of States in Public International Law reflected a fundamental shift in international legal reasoning on the birth and death of states. How and through what means might a state’s legal identity survive revolution, imperial administration, or belligerent occupation? How would observers know if a state’s international personality was extinguished? To offer a legal answer to these questions, Marek argued, one must think ‘from outside states, ' as states themselves were unable to think their own non-existence. She contributed the first systematic presentation of international law as a vantage point (or legal fiction) that existed both before and after states, and was thus capable of governing their creation and extinction.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Women’s International Thought |
| Subtitle of host publication | A New History |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
| Pages | 327-344 |
| Number of pages | 18 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9781108859684 |
| ISBN (Print) | 9781108494694 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jan 1 2021 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General Social Sciences
- General Arts and Humanities
Keywords
- continuity of states
- death of states
- decolonization
- international law
- international law and empire
- international legal thought
- Krystyna Marek
- legal personality
- sovereignty