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11 - Time Travel in the Law of International Responsibility

from Part III - International Responsibility of Public Institutions: Fault-based or Not?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2022

Samantha Besson
Affiliation:
Collège de France, Paris
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Summary

This chapter examines the temporality around which international law is articulated, with an emphasis on the doctrine of international responsibility. The chapter specifically elaborates on how the doctrine of international responsibility suspends international law’s one-directional temporality and provides discursive devices that allow one to travel back and forth between the past of wrongfulness and the present of responsibility. Such two-directional temporality, the chapter argues, is at the service of the narrative function of international responsibility in that such two-way time travel allows a re-representation of the real produced by legal claims made under the doctrine of international responsibility. The chapter ends with concluding remarks on the distinction between the imaginary and the real.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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