Skip to content

TWAILR

Third World Approaches to International Law Review
Main navigation
  • About
    • Founding Statement
    • Editorial Collective
    • Advisory Board
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Open Access
    • Supporters
  • TWAIL Review
    • Issue 01 (2020)
      • Anghie
      • TWAILR Collective
      • Mickelson
      • Gathii
      • Chandra
      • Carvalho
      • Bacca
      • Hammoudi
      • Feyissa
    • Issue 02 (2021)
      • Achiume & Last
      • Bragato & Filho
      • Makaza-Goede
      • Greenman & Tzouvala
      • Zichi
      • Rigney
      • Abdelkarim
      • Menon
      • Mitchell
    • Issue 03 (2022)
      • Wang
      • Knox
      • Atique
      • Adar
      • Reddy
      • Effoduh
      • Venkatesh
      • Jamil & Koonan
    • Issue 04 (2023)
      • Hindi
      • Jain
      • Haripershad
      • Bielby
      • Delgado
      • Mickelson
      • Ngugi
    • Issue 05 (2024)
      • Leichtweis
      • Malik
      • Ezirigwe
      • Bryan
      • Òní
      • Sagay
      • Clarke
      • Natarajan y Khoday
    • Issue 06 (2025)
      • Chimni
      • Badreddine
      • Acosta-Zárate
      • Rivas-Ramírez
      • Onnoghen-Theophilus
      • Odong
      • Hammouri
      • Thomasen & Kellen
  • TWAILR: Reflections
  • TWAILR: Dialogues
  • TWAILR: Extra
  • Announcements
  • TWAILR Academy
    • Bogotá 2023
      • Call for Applications
      • Programme
      • Video Recordings

Author: sujithxavier

(Un)Freedom to Criticize the Judiciary in India: Colonial Origins and Postcolonial Realities

T T Read More

Haris Jamil explores the colonial inheritance of contemporary contempt of court laws in India and how the civilising mission is reinvented domestically to stifle radical dissent and revolution. Jamil observes the ease with which such laws sit alongside international human rights law.

October 10, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Isthmus: Waseem’s Journey

T T Read More

As all of our lives now seem suspended between an imagined past and an unknown future, Banan Abdelrahman reflects along with those who are habitually unsettled and displaced, by entering into one family’s experience of a significant journey.

October 10, 2020 TWAILR: Extra

TWAILR Mixtape: System Crash and the Subaltern Subject – a Musical Narrative from the Levant

T T Read More

Compiled and narrated by Shahd Hammouri.

August 26, 2020 TWAILR: Extra

Beyond Law and Numbers: Civilian suffering and the ICC’s engagement with Afghanistan

T T Read More

Christiane Wilke reflects on the possible gaps in the ICC’s engagement with Afghanistan through the lens of the United Nations Assistance Mission to Afghanistan’s Annual Report on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict.

July 28, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Rewriting India: The Construction of the ‘Hindutva’ Citizen in the Indian state

T T Read More

Vasanthi Venkatesh and Fahad Ahmad reflect on the BJP’s insidious use of legitimate state power through administrative regulation, constitutionalism, citizenship determination, adoption of international law and neoliberal economic policies, to further its ‘Hindutva’ ideology.

June 25, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Politics and Piety in India: Re-learning Traditions of Civility

T T Read More

Adil Hasan Khan unpacks the colonial histories of the project of modernity in India and transcends the distinction between secular and anti-secular. He envisions a relationship between law, religion and politics whereby politics is neither fully determined by religion and law, nor entirely bereft of an ethic; and he turns to traditions of civility to inspire peaceful cohabitation.

June 12, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Revisiting Allende’s 1972 Speech at the United Nations General Assembly: Histories Repeated with a Twist

T T Read More

Shahd Hammouri recalls Allende’s speech and traces the spirals of history – the discourse and conduct – that over time led to the gradual exclusion of economic and corporate matters from public international law, and the normalisation of such a state of affairs.

June 2, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Crisis Constitutionalism, Permanent Emergency and the Amnesias of International Law in Jammu and Kashmir

T T Read More

Shrimoyee Nandini Ghosh reflects on the historical trajectories and consequences of the international community’s domestication of Kashmir, and maps how the Indian legal order serves to simultaneously effectuate and erase the conditions of militarized occupation, armed conflict and complex permanent emergency in Kashmir.

May 28, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Hawaiian Sovereignty and the Limits of Statehood: De-Occupation or Decolonisation?

T T Read More

J. Kēhaulani Kauanui discusses her monograph, ‘Paradoxes of Hawaiian Sovereignty: Land, Sex, and the Colonial Politics of State Nationalism’, with Ntina Tzouvala.

May 19, 2020 TWAILR: Dialogues

Minorities and the Making of Postcolonial States in International Law

T T Read More

Mohammad Shahabuddin elucidates in a new book why minorities are often marginalized in postcolonial states, through identifying three visions of the postcolonial state, and tracing the operations of international law therein.

May 13, 2020 TWAILR: Reflections

Posts navigation

Previous 1 … 14 15 16 17 18 19 Next
  • Home
  • About
    • Advisory Board
    • Editorial Collective
    • Founding Statement
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Supporters
    • Open Access Policy
  • Ọláolúwa Òní~ Nigeria’s Settler-Colonial Present: Review Essay of Folúkẹ́ Adébísí’s Decolonisation and Legal Knowledge
  • B.S. Chimni ~ Del reasentamiento a la repatriación involuntaria: hacia una historia crítica de las soluciones duraderas a los problemas de los refugiados
  • Christiana Essie Sagay~ Transnational Labour Mobility and Issue-Linkages in the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration: A TWAIL Analysis.
  • Conrad Bryan ~ The Pursuit of Justice for Children of African Irish Descent: Can International Law provide a pathway to justice?
  • Daniel Rivas-Ramírez ~ We are not cut from the same cloth: Unveiling the exclusionary bias of sanitary policies for food production in Colombia
  • Ewuwuni Onnoghen-Theophilus ~ Data Free Flow with Trust: “Yea” or “Nay” for Developing Countries?
  • Hussein Badreddine ~ A Historical Perspective on Space Resource Exploitation 
  • Issue 05 (2024)
  • Issue 06 (2025)
  • Jane Ezirigwe ~ TWAIL As A Scholarly Approach To Teaching International Economic Law In Selected African Universities: Pedagogy And Challenges
  • Kamari Maxine Clarke~El imperio del derecho a través de la economía de las apariencias: la construcción discursiva de “El Señor de la Guerra Africano”
  • Kristen Thomasen & Jeremy Kellen ~ Smoke & Mirrors: The Imperial Arc of the Magic of Artificial Intelligence
  • Laura Acosta-Zárate ~ Beyond the Performance of Restorative Justice: The Role of Local Practices in Colombia’s Transitional Justice
  • Matheus Gobbato Leichtweis ~ Bob Marley and the TWAILers: Music, Decolonization, and the Critique of International Legal Education
  • S. Ali Malik ~ ‘Making the New Developmental State: International Law and Neoliberal State Formation in India’
  • Shahd Hammouri ~ Desensitising Modern Warfare through International Law
  • TWAIL Review
    • Issue 01 (2020)
      • Antony Anghie ~ ‘Welcoming the TWAIL Review’
      • TWAILR Editorial Collective ~ ‘A Journal for a Community’
      • Karin Mickelson ~ ‘Hope in a TWAIL Register’
      • James Gathii ~ ‘Africa and the Radical Origins of the Right to Development’
      • Rajshree Chandra ~ ‘The “Moral Economy” of Cosmopolitan Commons’
      • Fabia Fernandes Carvalho Veçoso ~ ‘Resisting Intervention through Sovereign Debt: A Redescription of the Drago Doctrine’
      • Paulo Ilich Bacca ~ ‘The Double Bind and the Reverse Side of the International Legal Order: Talking with Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui and El Colectivo’
      • Ali Hammoudi ~ ‘The International Law of Informal Empire and the “Question of Oman”’
      • Hailegabriel G. Feyissa ~ ‘Non-European Imperialism and Europeanisation of Law: Complexities of Legal Codification in Imperial Ethiopia’
    • Issue 02 (2021)
      • E. Tendayi Achiume & Tamara Last ~ Decolonial Regionalism: Reorienting Southern African Migration Policy
      • Fernanda Frizzo Bragato & Alex Sandro da Silveira Filho ~ The Colonial Limits of Transnational Corporations’ Accountability for Human Rights Violations
      • Dorothy Makaza-Goede ~ Through the Contestation Looking-Glass: State Immunity and (Non)Compliance with the International Criminal Court
      • Kathryn Greenman & Ntina Tzouvala ~ Foreword: The League of Nations Decentred
      • Paola Zichi ~ “We Desire Justice First, Then We Will Work for Peace”: Clashes of Feminisms and Transnationalism in Mandatory Palestine
      • Sophie Rigney ~ On Hearing Well and Being Well Heard: Indigenous International Law at the League of Nations
      • Shaimaa Abdelkarim ~ Nuances of Recognition in the League of Nations and United Nations: Examining Modern and Contemporary Identity Deformations in Egypt
      • Parvathi Menon ~ Negotiating Subjection: The Political Economy of Protection in the Iraqi Mandate (1914-1932)
      • Ryan Martínez Mitchell ~ Monroe’s Shadow: League of Nations Covenant Article 21 and the Space of Asia in International Legal Order
    • Issue 03 (2022)
      • Yilin Wang ~ The Dissociation of Chinese International Law Scholars from TWAIL
      • Robert Knox ~ Imperialism, Hypocrisy and the Politics of International Law
      • Asma Atique ~ The Story of Masdar: ‘Sustainable Development’ for Migrant Justice?
      • Perpetua Akoth Adar ~ Space and the Future of Humanity: A TWAIL Critique of International Space Law and Space Discourse
      • Puskhar Reddy ~ Breaking Away from Binaries: Can TWAIL Enrich Normative Views of the ‘Race to the Bottom’?
      • Jake Okechukwu Effoduh ~ Regulating Self-driving Cars: An African Perspective
      • Vasanthi Venkatesh ~ International Casteist Governance and the Dalit Radical Tradition: Reimagining a Counter-hegemonic Transnational Legal Order
      • Haris Jamil & Sujith Koonan ~ The State, State Practice and International Law: A Critical Examination
    • Issue 04 (2023)
      • Ata R. Hindi ~ ‘Unlawful Occupations? Assessing the Legality of Occupations, including for Serious Breaches of Peremptory Norms’
      • Ananya Jain ~ International Economic Law and COVID-19: Global Capitalism as an Imperialist Tool
      • Alicia Haripershad ~ The Right to Access Contraception: A Third World Feminist Analysis of the CEDAW and the Maputo Protocol as interpreted in Nigeria and Uganda
      • Dominic J Bielby ~ Immuno-Imperialism: TRIPS and the Third World’s Disadvantaged Access to the COVID-19 Vaccine
      • Richard Delgado ~ El académico imperial: Reflexiones de una revisión a la literatura sobre derechos civiles
      • Karin Mickelson ~ Retórica y rabia: Voces del Tercer Mundo en el discurso jurídico internacional
      • Joel Ngugi ~ Haciendo nuevo vino para viejos odres: ¿Puede la reforma del derecho internacional emancipar al tercer mundo en la era de la globalización?
  • TWAILR Academy
  • TWAILR Academy 2023, Bogotá
  • TWAILR Academy 2023: Video Recordings
  • UnyimeAbasi Odong ~ Red Herrings, Red Flags, and Real Risks: A TWAIL Analysis of the FATF Regime for Virtual Currency Transactions
  • Usha Natarajan y Kishan Khoday~Situando la naturaleza: hacer y deshacer el derecho internacional
Secondary navigation
  • Search

Begin typing your search above and press return to search. Press Esc to cancel.

TWAILR
Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: Hive.
 

Loading Comments...