Affiliation:
1. Princeton University, USA; Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Abstract
The self-determination of peoples is a fundamental legitimating principle of the international system; it justifies the system’s very existence. Through a vast diachronic corpus and pertinent data sets, this article nevertheless reveals a puzzling decline in the public discourse on, and practice of, self-determination over the last 50 years. I identify and assess four structural explanations for this decline: “lexical change” (replacing self-determination with alternative terms); “silent hegemony” (taking the norm for granted); “reactive rhetoric” (echoing conflicts and new state formation post hoc); and “mission accomplished” (rectifying the incongruence between national boundaries and state borders). Complementing these structural causes with agential reasons, I further suggest that powerful state actors and persuasive academics have sought to “tame” self-determination as both principle and practice, retaining the term but altering its meaning from a source of threat into a resource for containing it. Self-determination, however, has not been eliminated, and taming it may yet prove a pyrrhic victory.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
23 articles.
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1. Rethinking self-determination: colonial and relational geographies in Asia;Territory, Politics, Governance;2023-08-02
2. The Emergence and Evolution of Self-Determination;The Routledge Handbook of Self-Determination and Secession;2023-01-13
3. How Peace Operations Did Not Emerge as a Norm after the First World War;The International History Review;2021-09-24
4. Index;The Edge of Law;2019-12-19
5. Bibliography;The Edge of Law;2019-12-19