Local Space, Global Life: The Everyday Operation of International Law and Development

Author:   Luis Eslava (University of Kent, Canterbury)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107465091


Pages:   374
Publication Date:   06 October 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Local Space, Global Life: The Everyday Operation of International Law and Development


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Author:   Luis Eslava (University of Kent, Canterbury)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.50cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9781107465091


ISBN 10:   1107465095
Pages:   374
Publication Date:   06 October 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Building the global from the local; 3. Development and the nation-state; 4. Development changes places; 5. The making of a new Bogotá; 6. The local self of the international; 7. Conclusions.

Reviews

'Every now and then, books come along which make us look afresh at things we thought we knew. Local Space, Global Life is one of those books. Eslava's meticulous analysis of the way international law shapes daily life in the Global South is given life by a resistant sensibility and fluency across disciplines. Considered through his lens, international law will never look the same again.' Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne, and author of Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality 'Luis Eslava's book is extraordinary. It examines sharply and deeply the contemporary interactions between international law and the development project. The book makes explicit the ways in which these interactions operate and shape both the national and local levels.' Daniel Bonilla Maldonado, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, and editor of Constitutionalism of the Global South 'Through this detailed study of the attempts of Bogota to achieve development - a study that effectively combines insights and methods from ethnography, law, political economy and history - Luis Eslava succeeds in presenting us with a fresh understanding of the ways in which contemporary international law operates, and the manner in which it shapes the most intimate aspects of everyday life for the people enmeshed in such projects. Passionately and meticulously argued, deftly traversing different disciplines, this book modestly but powerfully suggests the need to rethink fundamental notions of sovereignty, the nation-state, citizenship, international law, development and international institutions. This is a superb work of quite astonishing range and insight.' Antony Anghie, University of Utah, and author of Imperialism Sovereignty and International Law 'Global Space, Local Life is a profound reflection of the role of law in the history of the present. Situated, ethnographically, in Bogota, it opens up a window onto the world at large by demonstrating how a culture of legality, parsed by local means and ends, has come to regulate so much of everyday life everywhere, not least in zones of illegality - this in a dialectical counterpoint with the proliferating workings of international jurisprudence, with the neoliberal turn toward decentralized development, and with the fetishism of 'the [typically undefined, eternally underspecified] local'. A must-read for anyone, whatever their discipline or their ideological convictions, concerned with law and society in the contemporary moment.' John Comaroff, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and co-author of Theory from the South: Or, How Euro-America Is Evolving Toward Africa 'Local Space, Global Life offers an illuminating analysis of the stakes involved in the current focus of international institutions upon transforming cities such as Bogota into development success stories. Combining subtle ethnographic studies of the situation of people living on the outskirts of these cities in 'illegal settlements' with sophisticated conceptual analysis, the book provides a nuanced account of the turn the city in international law and development. A must-read for anyone struggling to make sense of the changing relationship of international law and development to the nation-state.' Anne Orford, University of Melbourne, and author of International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect 'A fascinating book. Law shapes the worlds we inhabit, both locally and globally, and Eslava shows us how by mapping the formal and informal arrangements that generate urban space. The surprise is the significance of international law in the most local of places. A terrific case study of law in development.' David Kennedy, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and author of Of War and Law Every now and then, books come along which make us look afresh at things we thought we knew. Local Space, Global Life is one of those books. Eslava's meticulous analysis of the way international law shapes daily life in the Global South is given life by a resistant sensibility and fluency across disciplines. Considered through his lens, international law will never look the same again. Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne, and author of Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality Luis Eslava's book is extraordinary. It examines sharply and deeply the contemporary interactions between international law and the development project. The book makes explicit the ways in which these interactions operate and shape both the national and local levels. Daniel Bonilla Maldonado, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, and editor of Constitutionalism of the Global South Through this detailed study of the attempts of Bogota to achieve development - a study that effectively combines insights and methods from ethnography, law, political economy and history - Luis Eslava succeeds in presenting us with a fresh understanding of the ways in which contemporary international law operates, and the manner in which it shapes the most intimate aspects of everyday life for the people enmeshed in such projects. Passionately and meticulously argued, deftly traversing different disciplines, this book modestly but powerfully suggests the need to rethink fundamental notions of sovereignty, the nation-state, citizenship, international law, development and international institutions. This is a superb work of quite astonishing range and insight. Antony Anghie, University of Utah, and author of Imperialism Sovereignty and International Law Local Space, Global Life is a profound reflection of the role of law in the history of the present. Situated, ethnographically, in Bogota, it opens up a window onto the world at large by demonstrating how a culture of legality, parsed by local means and ends, has come to regulate so much of everyday life everywhere, not least in zones of illegality - this in a dialectical counterpoint with the proliferating workings of international jurisprudence, with the neoliberal turn toward decentralized development, and with the fetishism of the [typically undefined, eternally underspecified] local . A must-read for anyone, whatever their discipline or their ideological convictions, concerned with law and society in the contemporary moment. John Comaroff, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and co-author of Theory from the South: Or, How Euro-America Is Evolving Toward Africa Local Space, Global Life offers an illuminating analysis of the stakes involved in the current focus of international institutions upon transforming cities such as Bogota into development success stories. Combining subtle ethnographic studies of the situation of people living on the outskirts of these cities in illegal settlements with sophisticated conceptual analysis, the book provides a nuanced account of the turn the city in international law and development. A must-read for anyone struggling to make sense of the changing relationship of international law and development to the nation-state. Anne Orford, University of Melbourne, and author of International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect A fascinating book. Law shapes the worlds we inhabit, both locally and globally, and Eslava shows us how by mapping the formal and informal arrangements that generate urban space. The surprise is the significance of international law in the most local of places. A terrific case study of law in development. David Kennedy, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and author of Of War and Law


'Every now and then, books come along which make us look afresh at things we thought we knew. Local Space, Global Life is one of those books. Eslava's meticulous analysis of the way international law shapes daily life in the Global South is given life by a resistant sensibility and fluency across disciplines. Considered through his lens, international law will never look the same again.' Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne, and author of Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality 'Luis Eslava's book is extraordinary. It examines sharply and deeply the contemporary interactions between international law and the development project. The book makes explicit the ways in which these interactions operate and shape both the national and local levels.' Daniel Bonilla Maldonado, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, and editor of Constitutionalism of the Global South 'Through this detailed study of the attempts of Bogota to achieve development - a study that effectively combines insights and methods from ethnography, law, political economy and history - Luis Eslava succeeds in presenting us with a fresh understanding of the ways in which contemporary international law operates, and the manner in which it shapes the most intimate aspects of everyday life for the people enmeshed in such projects. Passionately and meticulously argued, deftly traversing different disciplines, this book modestly but powerfully suggests the need to rethink fundamental notions of sovereignty, the nation-state, citizenship, international law, development and international institutions. This is a superb work of quite astonishing range and insight.' Antony Anghie, University of Utah, and author of Imperialism Sovereignty and International Law 'Global Space, Local Life is a profound reflection of the role of law in the history of the present. Situated, ethnographically, in Bogota, it opens up a window onto the world at large by demonstrating how a culture of legality, parsed by local means and ends, has come to regulate so much of everyday life everywhere, not least in zones of illegality - this in a dialectical counterpoint with the proliferating workings of international jurisprudence, with the neoliberal turn toward decentralized development, and with the fetishism of 'the [typically undefined, eternally underspecified] local'. A must-read for anyone, whatever their discipline or their ideological convictions, concerned with law and society in the contemporary moment.' John Comaroff, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and co-author of Theory from the South: Or, How Euro-America Is Evolving Toward Africa 'Local Space, Global Life offers an illuminating analysis of the stakes involved in the current focus of international institutions upon transforming cities such as Bogota into development success stories. Combining subtle ethnographic studies of the situation of people living on the outskirts of these cities in 'illegal settlements' with sophisticated conceptual analysis, the book provides a nuanced account of the turn the city in international law and development. A must-read for anyone struggling to make sense of the changing relationship of international law and development to the nation-state.' Anne Orford, University of Melbourne, and author of International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect 'A fascinating book. Law shapes the worlds we inhabit, both locally and globally, and Eslava shows us how by mapping the formal and informal arrangements that generate urban space. The surprise is the significance of international law in the most local of places. A terrific case study of law in development.' David Kennedy, Harvard University, Massachusetts, and author of Of War and Law


Author Information

Luis Eslava is a lecturer in international law at Kent Law School, a senior fellow at Melbourne Law School, and an international professor at Universidad Externado de Colombia. He teaches and writes in the areas of international law, international legal theory and history, anthropology of international law, public law, law and development, and urban law and politics.

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