959
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Extraction and jurisdiction: forms of law and the Antarctic Treaty System*

ORCID Icon

References

Primary Sources

  • Antarctic Treaty, opened for signature 1 December 1959, 402 UNTS 71 (entered into force 23 June 1961).
  • Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty, Madrid, 4 October 1991, 30 ILM 1461 (entered into force 14 January 1998).
  • Resolution adopted at the 38th Session of the General Assembly. UNGA, 1983, 38th Sess, 97th Plen Mtg (15 December 1983) UN Doc A/RES/38/77.

Secondary Sources

  • Tendayi Achiume (2019) Global Extractivism and Racial Inequality: Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, UN Doc A/HRC/41/54 (14 May), Human Rights Council, 41st session, 24 June – 12 July 2019, Agenda Item 9.
  • Antony Anghie (2005) Imperialism, Sovereignty, and the Making of International Law, Cambridge University Press.
  • Antony Antonello (2019) The Greening of Antarctica: Assembling an International Environment, Oxford University Press.
  • Olivia Barr (2013) ‘Walking with Empire’ 38 Australian Feminist Law Journal 59.
  • Olivia Barr (2016) A Jurisprudence of Movement: Common Law, Walking, Unsettling Place, Routledge.
  • Kees Bastmeijer (2018) ‘Introduction: The Madrid Protocol 1998–2018. The Need to Address “The Success Syndrome”’ 8(2) The Polar Journal 230.
  • Kathleen Birrell and Julia Dehm (2021) ‘International Law and the Humanities in the Anthropocene’ in Shane Chalmers and Sundhya Pahuja (eds) The Routledge Handbook of International Law and the Humanities, Routledge, pp. 407–421.
  • Kathleen Birrell and Daniel Matthews (2020) ‘Laws for the Anthropocene: Orientations, Encounters, Imaginaries’ 31 Law and Critique 233.
  • Ruth Buchanan (2019) ‘End Times in the Antipodes: Propaganda and Critique in On the Beach’ in Matthew Craven, Sundhya Pahuja and Gerry Simpson (eds) International Law and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, pp. 559–581.
  • Matthew Craven (2019) ‘“Other Spaces”: Constructing the Legal Architecture of a Cold War Commons and the Scientific-Technical Imaginary of Outer Space’ 30(2) European Journal of International Law 546.
  • Matthew Craven, Sundhya Pahuja and Gerry Simpson (2019) ‘Reading and Unreading a Historiography of Hiatus’ in Matthew Craven, Sundhya Pahuja and Gerry Simpson (eds) International Law and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–24.
  • Klaus Dodds, Alan D Hemmings and Peter Roberts (eds) (2017) Handbook on the Politics of Antarctica, Edward Elgar.
  • Shaunnaugh Dorsett and Shaun McVeigh (2012) Jurisdiction, Routledge.
  • Luis Eslava (2019) ‘TWAIL’, 2 April 2019, Critical Legal Thinking, https://criticallegalthinking.com/2019/04/02/twail-coordinates/.
  • Luis Eslava and Sundhya Pahuja (2020) ‘The State and International Law: A Reading From the Global South’ 11(1) Humanity 118.
  • Luis Eslava, Caitlin Murphy and Sundhya Pahuja (forthcoming) ‘Development, International Law, and the State’ in Ruth Buchanan, Luis Eslava and Sundhya Pahuja (eds) The Oxford Handbook of International Law and Development, Oxford University Press.
  • Isabel Feichtner (2019) ‘Sharing the Riches of the Sea: The Redistributive and Fiscal Dimensions of Seabed Exploitation’ 30(2) European Journal of International Law 601.
  • Isabel Feichtner and Surabhi Ranganathan (2019) ‘International Law and Economic Exploitation in the Global Commons: Introduction’ 30(2) European Journal of International Law 541.
  • Christopher Gevers (2019) ‘To Seek with Beauty to Set the World Right: Cold War International Law and the Radical ‘Imaginative Geography’ of Pan-Africanism’ in Matthew Craven, Sundhya Pahuja and Gerry Simpson (eds) International Law and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, pp. 492–509.
  • Eduardo Gudynas (2021) Extractivisms: Politics, Economy and Ecology, Fernwood Publishing.
  • Donna Haraway (2015) ‘Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin’ 6 Environmental Humanities 159.
  • Caroline Levine (2015) Forms: Whole, Rhythm, Hierarchy, Network, Princeton University.
  • Facundo Martín (2017) ‘Reimagining Extractivism: Insights from Spatial Theory’ in Bettina Engels and Kristina Dietz (eds) Contested Extractivism, Society and the State: Struggles over Mining and Land, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 21–44.
  • Sarah Mason-Case and Julia Dehm (2021) ‘Redressing Historical Responsibility for the Unjust Precarities of Climate Change in the Present’ in Benoit Mayer and Alexander Zahar (eds) Debating Climate Law, Cambridge University Press, pp. 170–189.
  • Roger Merino (2020) ‘The Cynical State: Forging Extractivism, Neoliberalism and Development in Governmental Spaces’ 41(1) Third World Quarterly 58.
  • Karin Mickelson (2019) ‘Common Heritage of Mankind as a Limit to Exploitation of the Global Commons’ 30(2) European Journal of International Law 635.
  • Timothy Mitchell (2002) Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-politics, Modernity, University of California Press.
  • Stewart Motha (2018) Archiving Sovereignty: Law, History, Violence, University of Michigan Press.
  • Usha Natarajan and Julia Dehm (2022) Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law, Cambridge University Press.
  • Usha Natarajan and Kishan Khoday (2014) ‘Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law’ 27 Leiden Journal of International Law 573.
  • Sundhya Pahuja (2011) Decolonising International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality, Cambridge University Press.
  • Sundhya Pahuja (2012) ‘Conserving the World’s Resources?’ in James Crawford and Martii Koskeniemmi (eds) Cambridge Companion to International Law, Cambridge University Press, pp. 398–420.
  • Sundhya Pahuja (2013) ‘Laws of Encounter: A Jurisdictional Account of International Law’ 1(1) London Review of International Law 63.
  • Sundhya Pahuja and Cait Storr (2017) ‘Rethinking Iran and international Law: The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company Case Revisited’ in James Crawford, Abdul Koroma, Said Mahmoudi and Alain Pellet (eds) The International Legal Order: Current Needs and Possible Responses, Brill Nijhoff, pp. 53–74.
  • Shiri Pasternak (2014) ‘Jurisdiction and Settler Colonialism: Where Do Laws Meet?’ 29(2) Canadian Journal of Law and Society 145.
  • Shiri Pasternak, Deborah Cowen, Robert Clifford, Tiffany Joseph, Dayna Nadine Scott, Anne Spice and Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark (2023) ‘Infrastructure, Jurisdiction, Extractivism: Keywords for decolonizing geographies’ 101 Political Geography 102763.
  • Charlotte Peevers (2019) ‘International Law, Cold War Juridical Theatre and the Making of the Suez Crisis’ in Matthew Craven, Sundhya Pahuja and Gerry Simpson (eds) International Law and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, pp. 467–491.
  • Surabhi Ranganathan (2018) ‘Manganese Nodules’ in Jessie Hohmann and Daniel Joyce (eds) International Law’s Objects, Oxford University Press, pp. 272–283.
  • Surabhi Ranganathan (2019a) ‘Ocean Floor Grab: International Law and the Making of an Extractive Imaginary’ 30(2) European Journal of International Law 573.
  • Surabhi Ranganathan (2019b) ‘The Common Heritage of Mankind: Annotations on a Battle’ in Jochen von Bernstoff and Phillip Dann (eds) The Battle for International Law: South-North Perspectives on the Decolonization Era, Oxford University Press, pp. 35–51.
  • Roland Rich (1982) ‘A Minerals Regime for Antarctica’ 31(4) International and Comparative Law Quarterly 709.
  • Donald Rothwell (1990) ‘The Antarctic Treaty System: Resource Development, Environmental Protection or Disintegration?’ 43(3) Arctic 284.
  • Donald Rothwell and Alan Hemmings (2018) International Polar Law, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Dayna N Scott (2020) ‘Extraction Contracting: The Struggle for Control of Indigenous Lands’ 119(2) South Atlantic Quarterly 269.
  • Dayna N Scott (2021) ‘Extractivism: Socio-legal Approaches to Relations with Lands and Waters’ in Mariana Valverde, Kamari Clarke, Eve Darian-Smith and Prahba Kotiswaran (eds) Handbook of Law and Society, Routledge, pp. 124–127.
  • Dayna N Scott (2023) in Shiri Pasternak, Deborah Cowen, Robert Clifford, Tiffany Joseph, Dayna Nadine Scott, Anne Spice, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark ‘Infrastructure, Jurisdiction, Extractivism: Keywords for decolonizing geographies’ 101 Political Geography 102763.
  • Tim Stephens (2018) ‘The Antarctic Treaty System and the Anthropocene’ 8(1) The Polar Journal 29.
  • Cait Storr (forthcoming) ‘Critical Minerals: Australia’s Role in Negotiations over Resource Extraction in Domains beyond National Jurisdiction, 1958–1991’ in Maddy Chiam and Alison Duxbury (eds) Australia in the International Legal System: From Empire to the Contemporary World, Hart Publishing, draft on file with author.
  • Cait Storr (2020a) ‘From Sacred Trust to Common Heritage: The Uncommons History of the Common Heritage of Mankind’, Lecture at Essex Law School, February 2020, available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HhC80qrtSA (last visited 31 May 2023).
  • Cait Storr (2020b) International Status in the Shadow of Empire: Nauru and the Histories of International Law, Cambridge University Press.
  • Christy Thornton (2022) ‘The NIEO as Cautionary Tale’ Progressive International, https://progressive.international/blueprint/efb34a9f-240c-492c-a872-60568d454b63-thornton-the-nieo-as-cautionary-tale/en.
  • Gillian Triggs and Anna Riddell (2007) Antarctica: Legal and Environmental Challenges for the Future, British Institute of International and Comparative Law.
  • Ntina Tzouvala (2020) Capitalism as Civilisation: A History of International Law, Cambridge University Press.
  • Yale Note (1978) ‘Thaw in International Law–Rights in Antarctica under the Law of Common Spaces’ 87(4) Yale Law Journal 804.