This book is a response to my dissatisfaction with the way in which
international law and the development project tend to be approached as
separate fields of academic and institutional practice – as deterritorialized
and exceptional ventures, frictionless discourses that cross our lives only
occasionally. Yet although it may not be obvious, the argument I advance
in this book is that we, and the spaces surrounding us, are continually
being constituted and reconstituted by international law through its
marriage – in historical, ideological, economic and institutional terms –
to the development project. The might of this encounter, I suggest,
permeates our desires, the ends we aspire to and the means we use
to attain such ends. The twin siblings of international law and the
development project shape our territories, dreams and forms of action
relentlessly. In my view, our failure to pay attention to their expansive
and joint operation occludes much about how we inhabit the world and
about the consequences of these modes of habitation.
As a Latin American holding a Colombian passport (and having only
recently acquired an Australian passport), I have been well aware of this
fact. Travelling between Bogot?, Boston, Frankfurt, Melbourne and
London, amongst many other cities, to conduct fieldwork, attend conferences
and speak at workshops during the making of this book, I have
been asked many times about my legal status. And every time my status
has been questioned in each of these places, I have felt the tug of an
international normative order under construction. Even though migration
authorities, rental contracts and labour codes have been bedevilled
with idiosyncrasies in each place, and even though the peoples of these
places have very different stories to tell about themselves and their
relation to the land, at the end of the day these particularities have not
been great. Beyond these differences, I have always felt a strong alliance
between law, ideas of progress, and the sensation that by abiding by the
law, some kind of development is ensured; a new step in the long dureé
of global modernity is attained.