Introduction to the Symposium on Infrastructuring International Law

IF 1.2 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
AJIL Unbound Pub Date : 2023-01-09 DOI:10.1017/aju.2022.74
B. Kingsbury
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Infrastructures encompass dynamic networks and assemblages that enable and control flows of goods, people, and information over space. These can be physical, informational, or digital; most now are combinations of these, for example, the Internet, or Global Positioning and Navigation Systems (such as GPS and Beidou). Many other things run or depend on an infrastructure—andmost infrastructures depend on or link with other infrastructures. Some infrastructures lie underneath, barely noticed for long periods until things go wrong, while others attract much public and political attention and are joyously celebrated, fiercely resisted, or resignedly accepted. Infrastructures are important, but not much systematic work has been done on the significance of their relationship with international (or transversal) law. Consideration of how infrastructures affect or shape international law entails consideration of how relations, processes, and imaginations of particular infrastructures interact with law, and vice versa. This symposium contributes to the investigation of how infrastructures may work as fundamental components of regulatory ordering—or may work against or orthogonal to some such ordering projects and in support of competing or resistance projects.1 Even if it is not (yet) studied as a field, international infrastructure law is a large practice area and many of its components have long been prominent in specialized scholarship.2 International law—its praxis, doctrines, and structures—is routinely deployed in the enabling and controlling of certain kinds of transnational infrastructures, or the flows these infrastructures channel or block. Some notable infrastructures could barely exist or function without particular international law arrangements (specific infrastructures of this sort include the Suez Canal, the France-UKChannel Tunnel, the Schengen Information System, the World Health Organization’s pandemic monitoring system, and the Nordstream 2 pipeline built but suspended from becoming operational following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine). International law figures in sprawling initiatives of “infrastructural developmentalism” such as the Belt and Road Initiative or the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.3 International law enables or regulates financing and investment protection for large physical infrastructures, requirements to obtain
基础设施国际法专题讨论会导言
基础设施包括动态网络和组合,使和控制货物、人员和信息在空间上的流动。这些可以是物理的、信息的或数字的;现在大多数是这些的组合,例如,互联网,或全球定位和导航系统(如GPS和北斗)。许多其他东西运行或依赖于基础设施,而大多数基础设施依赖于其他基础设施或与其他基础设施链接。一些基础设施埋在地下,在很长一段时间里几乎没有人注意到,直到出了问题;而另一些基础设施则吸引了公众和政治的大量关注,要么欢欣雀跃地庆祝,要么遭到强烈抵制,要么无可奈何地接受。基础设施很重要,但关于其与国际法(或国际法)关系的重要性的系统工作还不多。考虑基础设施如何影响或塑造国际法,需要考虑特定基础设施的关系、过程和想象如何与法律相互作用,反之亦然。本次研讨会有助于调查基础设施如何作为监管秩序的基本组成部分,或者如何与某些此类秩序项目相抵触或正交,以及如何支持竞争或抵抗项目即使国际基础设施法尚未作为一个领域进行研究,但它是一个很大的实践领域,其许多组成部分长期以来一直在专业学术中突出国际法——其实践、理论和结构——通常被用于启用和控制某些类型的跨国基础设施,或这些基础设施引导或阻止的流动。如果没有特定的国际法安排,一些著名的基础设施几乎无法存在或运行(这类具体的基础设施包括苏伊士运河、法英海峡隧道、申根信息系统、世界卫生组织的流行病监测系统,以及在俄罗斯2022年入侵乌克兰后建成但暂停运营的Nordstream 2管道)。国际法在“一带一路”倡议或联合国可持续发展目标等庞大的“基础设施发展主义”倡议中发挥着重要作用。3国际法允许或规范大型有形基础设施的融资和投资保护
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来源期刊
AJIL Unbound
AJIL Unbound Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
8 weeks
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