JUST ABOUT TIME: INTERNATIONAL LAW’S TEMPORALITIES AND OUR MOMENT IN HISTORY

Sivan Shlomo Agon, Michal Saliternik

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Time is a Pandora's box that international lawyers have long been reluctant to fully open. Perhaps unwilling to tackle the complexities this elusive concept presents, or loath to confront past wrongs and future threats that might arise from the fabled box, international jurists have left core questions of time and international law largely underexplored. In so doing, however, they have overlooked time and temporality as useful analytical lenses through which to gain new and deeper understandings of international law as a discipline and governance system. After all, international law is entangled with time in various and multifaceted ways. International law does not simply exist in time, having its own past, present, and future. Rather, like law generally, international law is constantly being shaped, organized, and reconstructed by time, while also creating, embedding, and perpetuating temporal standards and understandings. Yet, whereas domestic law scholars have in recent decades devoted considerable attention to the complex time-law relationship, international lawyers have so far investigated this relationship in only a limited manner, focusing primarily on doctrinal and procedural questions, while leaving many theoretical issues unaddressed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)751-772
Number of pages22
JournalAmerican Journal of International Law
Volume118
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024.

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