| ... |
... |
@@ -1,0
+1,28 @@ |
|
1 |
+Giving international law moral force is a critical part of the colonial project. International law allows colonialism to hide itself – by faking its own death – and by giving it new tools to function. Jackson 09: |
|
2 |
+Marissa Jackson, “Neo-Colonialism, Same Old Racism: A Critical Analysis of the United States’ Shift toward Colorblindness as a tool for the Protection of the American Colonial Empire and White Supremacy”, Berkeley Journal of African-American Law and Policy, Volume 11, 2009. |
|
3 |
+So long as ...within the nation. |
|
4 |
+ |
|
5 |
+ |
|
6 |
+Theories that are colorblind don’t take into account the social background they are embedded in, that is a background of racism – this makes them a tool for racism. Walsh 04 |
|
7 |
+Walsh 4 (Kenneth, Staff Writer, Boston College Third World Law Journal) “COLOR-BLIND RACISM IN GRUTTER AND GRATZ” Boston College Third World Law Journal, Volume 24 No 2, 2004. Review of RACISM WITHOUT RACISTS: COLOR-BLIND RACISM AND THE PERSISTENCE OF RACIAL INEQUALITY IN THE UNITED STATES. By Eduardo Bonilla-Silva. Lanham, Boulder, New York, and Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield 2003. Pp. 213. AT |
|
8 |
+In his book...to fix.161 |
|
9 |
+ |
|
10 |
+Colonialism is the violent negation of those who are conquered. It renders the colonized invisible to hide the violent exploitation occurring. Hayes et al |
|
11 |
+Floyd W. Hayes III Fanon: a critical reader. Ed. Lewis Ricardo Gordon, T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting. “Fanon, Oppression and Resentment: The Black Experience In the United States.” 1996. |
|
12 |
+Fanon points out ...sees himself as |
|
13 |
+ |
|
14 |
+ |
|
15 |
+Our alternative is to reject the racist underpinning of international law in favor of a genealogy of examining erased perspectives. Equal inclusion is a prerequisite to forming a position – the role of the judge is to bring these hidden knowledges to light. Medina 11 |
|
16 |
+Medina, J. (2011). Toward a Foucaultian Epistemology of Resistance: Counter-Memory, Epistemic Friction, and Guerrilla Pluralism. Foucault Studies, 1(12), 9–35 |
|
17 |
+The central goal ...forgotten struggles. |
|
18 |
+ |
|
19 |
+ |
|
20 |
+It’s impossible to discuss policy options without considering the representations that frame them |
|
21 |
+Jourde 6 – PhD in Political Science Cedric * Ph.D., Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Hegemony or Empire?: The redefinition of US Power under George W Bush Ed. David and Grondin p. 182-3 |
|
22 |
+Relations between states ...with this 'other' |
|
23 |
+ |
|
24 |
+ |
|
25 |
+ |
|
26 |
+analytics |
|
27 |
+analytics |
|
28 |
+analytics |