The International Law of Informal Empire and the ‘Question of Oman’

2020, TWAIL Review, Issue 1, 121-151

Posted: 30 Aug 2022

See all articles by Ali Hammoudi

Ali Hammoudi

University of Windsor Faculty of Law

Date Written: October 17, 2020

Abstract

Semi-colonialism is a perplexing concept in international legal scholarship that has more often than not been conflated with colonialism proper. To remedy this analytic confusion, I propose a shift from a focus on the ideological aspects of the imperialism of international law to the semi colonial practices of informal domination on the ground. To do this, I revisit the understudied concept of the ‘protectorate’ in international law, and analyze its geopolitical uses. The geopolitical dimensions of protection illustrate the importance of geopolitics in the history of international law. After examining the connections between geopolitics and international law, the second part of the article looks into the origins of the strategic region of the ‘Middle East,’ focusing on the history of the protected states of the Trucial treaty system in the Persian Gulf. Finally, I turn to the ‘Question of Oman’ at the United Nations (1957-1965) to illustrate how the practices of informal domination operated through semi-colonial techniques of veiling imperial domination, the legal obfuscation of power relations, the legitimization of unilateral treaty breaking and geopolitical maneuvering with international legal arguments.

Keywords: International Law, Geopolitics, Persian Gulf, Oman, Semi-colonialism

Suggested Citation

Hammoudi, Ali, The International Law of Informal Empire and the ‘Question of Oman’ (October 17, 2020). 2020, TWAIL Review, Issue 1, 121-151, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4165131

Ali Hammoudi (Contact Author)

University of Windsor Faculty of Law ( email )

401 Sunset Ave, Windsor
Windsor, ON N9B 3P4
Canada
N9B 3P4 (Fax)

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