Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
Volume 111, Issue 1, Pages 57-103Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/ajil.2016.4
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Funding
- Australian Centre for Cyber Security at UNSW
- UNSW Law School, for the hospitality of the European University Institute
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International legal work involves trying to verify the condition of the world. This aspect of international legal work is changing in light of growing automation. The range of persons capable of engaging with this work, and ways of contesting what can be experienced in common, are shifting. With this comes redistribution of the power to govern and other juridical capacities on the global plane. Taking IAEA and UNHCR practices as exemplars, this article argues for renewed attention to these shifts.
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