Das Neue Berlin   /     Rights to Natural Resources – with Petra Gümplová

Description

From Congo to Afghanistan, natural resources are at the center of many contemporary political conflicts. Yet the mostly arbitrary rights to extract and use these resources are rarely reflected upon in depth. There is a lack of understanding of the historical origins as well as a critical analysis of our current global system of natural resource rights. Our guest Petra Gümplová attempts to do both. In her research, she approaches the topic with a historical genealogy of international law and with a normative theory of justice. For her, international law is simultaneously a historical cause of current injustices and the key to their moral critique. In her historical genealogy, she identifies three central legal principles that have shaped the modern resource regime. The Right of Conquest, the Right of Discovery and Occupation, and the Right of he Freedom of the Seas: all were invented and justified to secure valuable access to resources in distant parts of the world. Like military force and violence, legal considerations formed the basis of colonial practice. Paradoxically, the postwar development of international law then provides the tools for a comprehensive critique of resource injustice. Gümplová advocates a practice-oriented method of normative theory building. Rather than developing principles from an abstract and ideal standpoint, she seeks to draw out the moral implications of current international law standards. For her, a just postcolonial system of control over natural resources must be based on the principle of self-determination and on the comprehensive catalog of human rights.

Subtitle
Duration
01:51:33
Publishing date
2022-01-28 07:01
Link
https://dasneue.berlin/2022/01/28/rights-to-natural-resources-with-petra-guemplova/
Deep link
https://dasneue.berlin/2022/01/28/rights-to-natural-resources-with-petra-guemplova/#
Contributors
  Das Neue Berlin
author  
  Jan
contributor  
  Leo
contributor  
  Petra Gümplová
contributor  
Enclosures
https://dasneue.berlin/podlove/file/977/s/feed/c/m4a/dnb72.m4a
audio/mp4

Shownotes

From Congo to Afghanistan, natural resources are at the center of many contemporary political conflicts. Yet the mostly arbitrary rights to extract and use these resources are rarely reflected upon in depth. There is a lack of understanding of the historical origins as well as a critical analysis of our current global system of natural resource rights.

Our guest Petra Gümplová attempts to do both. In her research, she approaches the topic with a historical genealogy of international law and with a normative theory of justice. For her, international law is simultaneously a historical cause of current injustices and the key to their moral critique.

In her historical genealogy, she identifies three central legal principles that have shaped the modern resource regime. The Right of Conquest, the Right of Discovery and Occupation, and the Right of the Freedom of the Seas: all were invented and justified to secure valuable access to resources in distant parts of the world. Like military force and violence, legal considerations formed the basis of colonial practice.

Paradoxically, the postwar development of international law then provides the tools for a comprehensive critique of resource injustice. Gümplová advocates a practice-oriented method of normative theory building. Rather than developing principles from an abstract and ideal standpoint, she seeks to draw out the moral implications of current international law standards. For her, a just postcolonial system of control over natural resources must be based on the principle of self-determination and on the comprehensive catalog of human rights.

Links


Verwandte Episoden

Gast

Deeplinks to Chapters

00:06:10.747 Why normative Analysis is important?
255
00:08:59.000 Practise based normative Theorizing
255
00:12:28.979 The Importance of International Law to understand Colonialism?
255
00:18:13.561 The Right of Conquest
255
00:24:03.695 What's new about Conquest?
255
00:26:12.913 What is an International System in the 16'th century?
255
00:28:13.214 The Role of Justification
255
00:33:07.014 The Right of Discovery and Occupation
255
00:37:13.754 John Locke and colonial Property Rights
255
00:41:51.779 Similarity to current Forms of Landgrabbing
255
00:43:33.067 Trading Copanies and commercial Colonialism
255
00:46:05.304 Right of the Freedom of the Seas
255
00:49:01.992 Pirates?
255
00:53:05.111 Freedom and Markets
255
00:55:50.470 Global Commons
255
01:04:35.991 The two Faces of International Law
255
01:10:29.624 The Right to Selfdetermination
255
01:16:07.905 The Ambivalence of national Souvereignty
255
01:25:40.693 How to criticize Souvereignty with Human Rights
255
01:32:45.039 Natural Resources in the World System
255
01:39:58.995 Human Rights 70 years after Arendts critique
255
01:50:05.366 Ketsa - Dawnage
255