EJIL: The Podcast!

Episode 33: Owning the Future? International Law and Technology as a Critical Project


Listen Later

International law operates in a world of rapid technological transformation. From the battlefield to the border, from online content moderation to open-source investigation, from humanitarianism to development, from counterterrorism to migration management, practices of central concern to international lawyers are progressively altered by the introduction of new technological tools. Many of these developments are troubling. The use of advanced algorithmic targeting tools used by Israel in Gaza instantiates both the tremendous civilian harm that data-driven technologies amplify and inflict, as well as the limitations of our existing legal repertoire in registering the nature, depth and scale of such harms. These injustices are layered onto the entrenched hierarchies, inequalities and sanctioned forms of violence in international law, but they also take on novel shapes as power and authority are routed along digital paths. 

In this episode, Dimitri Van Den Meerssche (Queen Mary University of London) is joined by Angelina Fisher (Guarini Global Law and Tech initiative, NYU) and André Dao (Laureate Program in Global Corporations, Melbourne Law School). Their conversation, drawing on a recent EJIL book review symposium, spans the co-constitutive relations between international law and technology, the limits of human rights, and new avenues for legal critique and resistance that reclaim a shared, collective future against its algorithmic appropriation.


Other scholarship mentioned in the course of the episode includes: Édouard Glissant, Poetics of Relation (translated by B. Wing) (1997); Sally Engle Merry, Human Rights and Gender Violence – Translating International Law into Local Justice (2005); Fleur Johns, Non-Legality in International Law: Unruly Law (2013); Ratna Kapur, Gender, Alterity and Human Rights – Freedom in a Fishbowl (2020); Yuk Hui, The Question Concerning Technology in China: An Essay in Cosmotechnics (2021); Henning Lahmann, ‘Self-Determination in the Age of Algorithmic Warfare’ (2025) European Journal of Legal Studies 161–214.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

EJIL: The Podcast!By European Journal of International Law

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

10 ratings


More shows like EJIL: The Podcast!

View all
Global News Podcast by BBC World Service

Global News Podcast

7,700 Listeners

Lowy Institute by Lowy Institute

Lowy Institute

21 Listeners

LSE: Public lectures and events by London School of Economics and Political Science

LSE: Public lectures and events

273 Listeners

Foreign Policy Live by Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy Live

606 Listeners

Political Fix by Financial Times

Political Fix

149 Listeners

EU Confidential by POLITICO

EU Confidential

106 Listeners

International Law Behind the Headlines by American Society of International Law

International Law Behind the Headlines

22 Listeners

Audiovisual Library of International Law by Audiovisual Library of International Law

Audiovisual Library of International Law

19 Listeners

asymmetrical haircuts by asymmetrical haircuts

asymmetrical haircuts

49 Listeners

The World in Brief from The Economist by The Economist

The World in Brief from The Economist

1,079 Listeners

The Rachman Review by Financial Times

The Rachman Review

134 Listeners

Hold Your Fire! by International Crisis Group

Hold Your Fire!

63 Listeners

Africa Daily by BBC World Service

Africa Daily

171 Listeners

The Just Security Podcast by Just Security

The Just Security Podcast

204 Listeners

Called to the Bar: International Law over Drinks by Douglas Guilfoyle

Called to the Bar: International Law over Drinks

1 Listeners