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SELLING” memos for the year 2024.
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LCP4801
International law
PORTFOLIO
MEMO
SEMESTER 2 – 2025 - UNISA
UNIQUE NUMBER: -
DUE DATE: - 23 OCTOBER 2025
Footnotes/Bibliography included
ASSIGNMENT PREVIEW
Question 1
“TWAIL scholars focused on understanding the deeper structures of the discipline, the very ontology of international law, and approached the
history and theory of international law from a very different set of perspectives. They argued that imperialism was central to international law.
This was not only because imperialism was the means by which international law became universal, a single system of rules that governed
societies in Africa and Asia, Europe, and the Pacific. Rather, imperialism was foundational to the making of international law because it was in
the colonial encounter that the basic doctrines of international law were forged.” Anghie, A. (2023). Rethinking international law: A TWAIL
retrospective. European Journal of International Law, 34(1), 7-112.
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, Question 1
“TWAIL scholars focused on understanding the deeper structures of the discipline, the
very ontology of international law, and approached the history and theory of international
law from a very different set of perspectives. They argued that imperialism was central to
international law. This was not only because imperialism was the means by which
international law became universal, a single system of rules that governed societies in
Africa and Asia, Europe, and the Pacific. Rather, imperialism was foundational to the
making of international law because it was in the colonial encounter that the basic
doctrines of international law were forged.” Anghie, A. (2023). Rethinking international
law: A TWAIL retrospective. European Journal of International Law, 34(1), 7-112.
1.1 With reference to the statement above, discuss the significance of TWAIL scholars
and their criticism of the imperialistic development of international law. (10)
1.2 Describe the development of international law and the contribution of pre- colonial
African entities to such development. Refer to relevant sources. (10)
1.3 Is the proliferation of international organisations in modern society part of the
development and transformation of international law? Explain. (5) [25]
1.1
Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) is a critical perspective discussed
in International Law (ed. Strydom, 2nd ed.), which re-examines how international law
developed and whose interests it serves.