Repetition and International Law

Repetition and International Law by Wouter Werner, published by Cambridge University Press on February 3, 2022, explores the complexities of international law through a unique lens. This 200-page book addresses the conventional understanding of the sources of international law and challenges the notion that they are fixed and limited. Werner delves into the emergence of new sources, drawing parallels between legal discourses and the rituals of what he terms “cyclical societies,” where the concept of eternal return plays a significant role.
Readers will find an in-depth examination of how historical events are transformed into repeatable legal categories and how these categories serve as placeholders for deeper foundational concepts that elude positive international law. The book engages with themes of law, international jurisprudence, and the philosophical underpinnings that influence legal practices. Through this analytical framework, Werner invites a reconsideration of the dynamics at play within international law, making this work a thought-provoking contribution to the field.
Official synopsis Publisher
“Chapter one starts from my embarrassment when teaching sources of international law. Following conventional wisdom, I inform students that international law is grounded on a limited set of sources. However, at some point, I also have to explain that it is possible for new sources of international law to emerge. How is this possible, given that international law is grounded on a limited set of sources? I try to deal with this uneasiness by comparing discourses on sources to rituals that prevail in what I call “cyclical societies,” organized around the belief in the eternal return of transcendental ideas, acts or events. To apply sources, I argue, is to perform a double act of repetition. First, historically contingent events are turned into manifestations of pregiven and repeatable categories. Second, sources are used as placeholders for something that will always escape positive international law: the foundational categories that underlie the sources of law. These foundational categories, I argue, work somewhat like celestial Gods in cyclical societies: Most of the time they stay dormant and aloof, but they can always be called upon in exceptional times”–
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