What Can We (She) Know about Sovereignty? Krystyna Marek and the Worldedness of International Law

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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 languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationWomen’s International Thought
Subtitle of host publicationA New History
PublisherCambridge University Press
Pages327-344
Number of pages18
ISBN (Electronic)9781108859684
ISBN (Print)9781108494694
DOIs
StatePublished - 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

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