International Status in the Shadow of Empire: Nauru and the Histories of International Law

Date & time

24 March 2022 1:00pm - 2:00pm

Venue

Phillipa Weeks Staff Library, ANU College of Law, Building 7, Room 7.4.1.

Contact

Ashley Rogge
6125 5375

Event description

In this seminar, Dr Cait Storr discusses her book 'International Status in the Shadow of Empire: Nauru and the Histories of International Law' (Cambridge University Press, 2020).

Nauru is often figured as an anomaly in the international order. This book offers a new account of Nauru’s imperial history and examines its significance to the histories of international law. Drawing on theories of jurisdiction and bureaucracy, it reconstructs four shifts in Nauru’s status – from German protectorate, to League of Nations C Mandate, to UN Trust Territory, to sovereign state – as a means of redescribing the transition from the nineteenth century imperial order to the twentieth century state system. The book argues that as international status shifts, imperial form accretes: as Nauru’s status shifted, what occurred at the local level was a gradual process of bureaucratisation. Two conclusions emerge from this argument. The first is that imperial administration in Nauru produced the Republic’s post-independence ‘failures’. The second is that international recognition of sovereign status is best understood as marking a beginning, not an end, of the process of decolonisation.
 

Speakers

Featured Speakers

Dr Cait Storr
Dr Cait Storr
Dr Cait Storr

Dr Cait Storr is Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Law Faculty. Her transdisciplinary research addresses the relationship between property, territory and jurisdiction in international law, with a particular focus on decolonial struggles for legal control over natural resources. She has published on the history of international administration, the concept of territory in international law, Australian imperialism in the Pacific, decolonisation, and international environmental law. Her doctoral thesis was awarded the University of Melbourne Chancellor's Prize (2018), and is published as a monograph, International Status in the Shadow of Empire: Nauru and the Histories of International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2020). Cait's current research examines the history and politics of the international law governing mineral resource extraction in domains beyond national jurisdiction, including space and the international seabed. She has held positions as early Career Academic Fellow at Melbourne Law School, Lecturer at the Glasgow School of Law, and junior faculty member with the Institute of Global Law and Policy at Harvard Law School.

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