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17 LJIL 271 (2004)
The Commodity-Form Theory of International Law: An Introduction

handle is hein.journals/lejint17 and id is 278 raw text is: 
Leiden Journal ofinternational Law, 17 (2004), Pp. 271-302
Q Foundation of the Leiden Journal of tnternational Law  Printed in the United Kingdom  DOI: IOICI7/So922I5650400827



The Commodity-Form Theory of

International Law: An Introduction


CHINA   MIEVILLE






   Abstract
   The New  Stream of critical international legal theory has been a welcome corrective to theory-
   blindness in international law, but it is limited by its philosophical idealism. The materialist
   philosophy of Marxism, by reference to political-economic contexts and conflicts, can better
   explain many of the New Stream's insights. The pioneering jurisprudence ofEvgeniiPashukanis
   shows that many 'traditional' Marxist theories of law are limited and limiting. A reformulation
   of Pashukanis's 'commodity-form' theory  shows that contra claims that the rule of law is
   characterized by peaceful coexistence, the unequal political violence of imperialism is intrinsic
   to the international system and to international law.

   Key  words
   commodification/commodity;   imperialism; indeterminacy; Marxism; Pashukanis


i.  THE NECESSITY OF (MARXIST) THEORY

i.i. The  blight  of managerialism
International   law has  notoriously   and  accurately  been  described  as a 'wasteland'
for theory.' Of course  the tsunami   of managerialist  writing2  is informed by  theories
of law, international   law, and  the  world,  but  mostly  unexamined and the more
ideological  for that. In this context the rise of what has been called the 'New  Stream'
of radical international  law scholarship  has been  of immeasurable importance, with
its project to 'dislodge  the discipline... from   its stagnation...  and rejuvenate   the
field as an arena of meaningful   intellectual inquiry'.3


    Ph.D. in international relations (London School ofEconomics); editorialboard, HistoricalMaterialism: Research
    in Critical Marxist Theory. This paper was presented at the symposium 'Marxism and International Law',
    organizedby the Leiden JournaloflnternationalLaw and held inThe Hague on 12-13 Sept. 2003. 1 am extremely
    grateful to the Leiden Journal of International Law for their invitation to take part in this symposium, and
    in particular to Susan Marks and Miklos Redner for their encouragement. This essay represents much-
    condensed material from my Ph.D. thesis, 'A Historical-Materialist Analysis of International Law and the
    Legal Form', London School of Economics, 2001, forthcoming as a book, Between Equal Rights: A Marxist
    Theory ofInternational Law (2004).
1.  B. S. Chimni, International Law and World Order(1993), at r5.
2.  It is estimated that 8o,ooo books on international law had been published by 1967, and that currently
    700 books and 3,000 articles on international law are published annually (P. Malanczuk, Akehurst's Modern
    Introduction to International Law (1997), 8).
3.  D. Kennedy, 'A New Stream of International Legal Scholarship', (1988) 7 Wisconsin International Law Journal
    i, at 6. Useful introductions to and overviews of the New Stream include N. Purvis, 'Critical Legal Studies
    in Public International Law', (1991)32 Harvard InternationalLaw Journal8r; A. Carty'Critical International
    Law: Recent Trends in the Theory of International Law', (1991) 2 EJIL 66; H. Charlesworth,'Subversive Trends
    in the Jurisprudence of International Law', (r992) 86 American SocietyforInternationalLaw Proceedings 125; D.
    Cass, 'Navigating the Newstream: Recent Critical Scholarship in International Law', (1996) 65 Nordic Journal

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