A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Fragmentation in International Law and Global Governance: A Conceptual Inquiry




AuthorsTimo Pankakoski, Antto Vihma

PublisherBERGHAHN JOURNALS

Publication year2017

JournalContributions to the History of Concepts

Journal name in sourceCONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF CONCEPTS

Journal acronymCONTRIB HIST CONCEPT

Volume12

Issue1

First page 22

Last page48

Number of pages27

ISSN1807-9326

eISSN1874-656X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3167/choc.2017.120103


Abstract
This article examines the concept and metaphor of fragmentation and its underlying assumptions in international law and global governance. Aft er engaging with fragmentation historically, we analyze current debates through five conceptual perspectives. Fragmentation is oft en perceived as a process, a gradation, a process with a single direction, a prognosis, and normatively as either loss or liberation. These interlinked tendencies carry conceptual implications, such as making fragmentation apparently inevitable or provoking positive revaluations of fragmentation in terms of differentiation. Furthermore, the conceptual coupling of fragmentation with modernity enhances these effects with an historical thesis. Consequently, fragmentation appears as a ubiquitous and necessary, rather than contingent, feature of modern law-a conceptual implication that may hinder empirical work, and that merits critical analysis.



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