Litcius/Paper detail

Decolonization and International Law: Putting the Ocean on the Map

Surabhi Ranganathan

2020Journal of the History of International Law / Revue d’histoire du droit international44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract From the middle of the twentieth century onwards, the order of the ocean has changed as remarkably as that of land. Yet, developments in the law of the sea usually receive less prominent consideration in international or global histories of this period. In this short essay, I examine firstly the ways in which literatures in history and international law engage, or not, with the ordering of the ocean during, and due to, decolonization. Secondly, I suggest that the making of the law of the sea offers rich insights into the contingencies, currents, and counter-currents of the decolonization moment. Among other things it reveals fluid political geographies, epistemic churn, and alternative models for the extraction and distribution of natural resources. The flickerings and foreclosures of the various possibilities of the decolonization moment are well worth further study, especially as unsettling our understandings of oceanic lines becomes necessary in the present times.

Topics & Concepts

DecolonizationInternational lawMoment (physics)Order (exchange)PoliticsLawUnited Nations Convention on the Law of the SeaPolitical scienceSociologyEconomicsFinancePhysicsClassical mechanicsInternational Maritime Law IssuesInternational Law and Human RightsArctic and Russian Policy Studies