Deploying Race, Employing Force: "African Mercenaries" and the 2011 NATO Intervention in Libya
- Publisher:
- University of California
- Publication Type:
- Journal Article
- Citation:
- UCLA Law Review, 2020, 67, (6)
- Issue Date:
- 2020
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Filename | Description | Size | |||
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Vol-67-6-Fallah-Tzouvala.pdf | Submitted version | 1.15 MB |
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This Article reflects on the ongoing synergies between international law, race and empire, as they are articulated in the regulation of mercenarism. It does so by examining the role of the racialized and gendered narratives about “African mercenaries” in the context of the UN Security Council authorization of the 2011 NATO intervention in Libya. By recovering the efforts of the Global South to outlaw the use of (white) mercenaries for the promotion of imperialist causes, and the resistance of Western states against these initiatives, this Article documents the reversal of these attitudes in the case of Libya. In so doing, the authors argue that international law is deeply implicated in the reproduction of racial domination and exploitation.
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