Marketing Global Justice: The Political Economy of International Criminal Law

Author:   Christine Schwöbel-Patel (University of Warwick)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781108710909


Pages:   329
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Marketing Global Justice: The Political Economy of International Criminal Law


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Overview

Marketing Global Justice is a critical study of efforts to 'sell' global justice. The book offers a new reading of the rise of international criminal law as the dominant institutional expression of global justice, linking it to the rise of branding. The political economy analysis employed highlights that a global elite benefit from marketised global justice whilst those who tend to be the 'faces' of global injustice - particularly victims of conflict - are instrumentalised and ultimately commodified. The book is an invitation to critically consider the predominance of market values in global justice, suggesting an 'occupying' of global justice as an avenue for drawing out social values.

Full Product Details

Author:   Christine Schwöbel-Patel (University of Warwick)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.479kg
ISBN:  

9781108710909


ISBN 10:   1108710905
Pages:   329
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  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.

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Reviews

'Branding and marketing may seem foreign to ethics and justice. But as Christine Schwöbel-Patel shows in this wonderful study, there is no way to understand the contemporary era without examining their relations. In her fascinating and wide-ranging exploration, she convincingly brings out how particular and selective recent initiatives in 'global justice' have been, with special emphasis on our neoliberal practices of international criminal law. After this bracing and disturbing investigation, our study of idealism must begin in acknowledgment of how it has been occupied in our time - but also how other strategies might liberate it for a different future.' Samuel Moyn, Yale University 'This is a path-breaking analysis of international criminal justice and the winds of the market that have shaped its substance and style; indeed, this book powerfully illustrates the intertwined lives of substance and style in the legal and institutional order for international justice. With intellectual rigor and originality this book connects the dots between international law and neoliberal analysis, between branding strategies and anti-impunity campaigns, between aesthetics and human rights, between profit and the genealogy of morals in the international public sphere. In tracking the winners and losers of this era of marketized international justice, the book also situates these developments in the material legacies of colonialism, and a world order that reproduces injustice even when it promises justice. An extraordinarily engaging and insightful book - heterodox international law scholarship at its best!' Vasuki Nesiah, Professor of Human Rights and International Law at The Gallatin School, New York University, co-Founder of Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) 'Christina Schwöbel-Patel has written Naomi Klein's No Logo for the field and practice of International Criminal Law. Her brilliant book shows how campaigns against genocide, atrocity and impunity in the 1990s were not just topics of widespread discussion but opportunities for branding, professional advancement, and even personal enrichment. Her account helpfully moves the debate from the lofty abstractions of moral decision into the mechanics of how cases were made and sold, populations were mobilized and often caricatured, and market imperatives tethered to those of humanitarian rescue.  It is a scathing critique and a sobering read that will help us to stake out terrain for global justice anew.' Quinn Slobodian, Author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism  'As states and scholars alike are debating whether international criminal law has been 'oversold',  Christine Schwöbel-Patel asks another, much more politically important and jurisprudentially generative question: how and why did we come to think of an entire legal field and even of global justice in terms of 'selling', 'branding' and 'investment'? Drawing from critical legal and marketing studies, this indispensable book reveals novel and unexamined dimensions of the profound, and profoundly destructive, influence of neoliberalism on international law. Those interested both in international criminal law and in law and political economy more broadly will do well to take note.' Ntina Tzouvala, Senior Lecturer, ANU College of Law


'Branding and marketing may seem foreign to ethics and justice. But as Christine Schwoebel-Patel shows in this wonderful study, there is no way to understand the contemporary era without examining their relations. In her fascinating and wide-ranging exploration, she convincingly brings out how particular and selective recent initiatives in 'global justice' have been, with special emphasis on our neoliberal practices of international criminal law. After this bracing and disturbing investigation, our study of idealism must begin in acknowledgment of how it has been occupied in our time - but also how other strategies might liberate it for a different future.' Samuel Moyn, Yale University 'This is a path-breaking analysis of international criminal justice and the winds of the market that have shaped its substance and style; indeed, this book powerfully illustrates the intertwined lives of substance and style in the legal and institutional order for international justice. With intellectual rigor and originality this book connects the dots between international law and neoliberal analysis, between branding strategies and anti-impunity campaigns, between aesthetics and human rights, between profit and the genealogy of morals in the international public sphere. In tracking the winners and losers of this era of marketized international justice, the book also situates these developments in the material legacies of colonialism, and a world order that reproduces injustice even when it promises justice. An extraordinarily engaging and insightful book - heterodox international law scholarship at its best!' Vasuki Nesiah, Professor of Human Rights and International Law at The Gallatin School, New York University, co-Founder of Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) 'Christina Schwoebel-Patel has written Naomi Klein's No Logo for the field and practice of International Criminal Law. Her brilliant book shows how campaigns against genocide, atrocity and impunity in the 1990s were not just topics of widespread discussion but opportunities for branding, professional advancement, and even personal enrichment. Her account helpfully moves the debate from the lofty abstractions of moral decision into the mechanics of how cases were made and sold, populations were mobilized and often caricatured, and market imperatives tethered to those of humanitarian rescue. It is a scathing critique and a sobering read that will help us to stake out terrain for global justice anew.' Quinn Slobodian, Author of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism 'As states and scholars alike are debating whether international criminal law has been 'oversold', Christine Schwoebel-Patel asks another, much more politically important and jurisprudentially generative question: how and why did we come to think of an entire legal field and even of global justice in terms of 'selling', 'branding' and 'investment'? Drawing from critical legal and marketing studies, this indispensable book reveals novel and unexamined dimensions of the profound, and profoundly destructive, influence of neoliberalism on international law. Those interested both in international criminal law and in law and political economy more broadly will do well to take note.' Ntina Tzouvala, Senior Lecturer, ANU College of Law


Author Information

Christine Schwöbel-Patel is Associate Professor at Warwick Law School and Co-Director of the Centre for Critical Legal Studies. She is the author of Global Constitutionalism in International Legal Perspective (2011) and editor of Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law: An Introduction (2014).

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