Farewell to the F-Word? Fragmentation of International Law in Times of the COVID-19 Pandemic

University of Toronto Law Journal (Forthcoming 2022)

43 Pages Posted: 29 Sep 2021

See all articles by Sivan Shlomo Agon

Sivan Shlomo Agon

Bar-Ilan University - Faculty of Law

Date Written: January 1, 2021

Abstract

The proliferation of international legal regimes, norms, and institutions in the post-Cold War era, known as the ‘fragmentation’ of international law, has sparked extensive debate among jurists. This debate has evolved as a dialectical process, seeing legal scholarship shifting from grave concern about fragmentation’s potentially negative impacts on the international legal order to a more optimistic view of the phenomenon, with recent literature suggesting that the tools needed to contain fragmentation’s ill-effects are today all at hand, thus arguing that the time has come ‘to bid farewell to the f-word.’ Drawing on the COVID-19 crisis as a testcase and considering the unresolved problems in existing fragmentation literature this crisis brings to the fore, this article asks whether such calls have perhaps been premature. Existing works on fragmentation, the article submits, including those bidding farewell to the f-word, have mainly focused on the problems of conflicts between international norms or international institutions, especially conflicts between international courts over competing jurisdictions and interpretations of law. But as the COVID-19 case—and, particularly, the deficient cooperation marked between the numerous international organizations reacting to the crisis—shows, the fragmentation of the international legal order does not only give rise to the potential consequences of conflicts of norms and clashes between international courts. Fragmentation also gives rise to pressing challenges of coordination when a proactive and cohesive international response is required to global problems like COVID-19, which cut across multiple international organizations playing critical roles in the creation, administration, and application of international law. By foregrounding cooperation between international organizations as a vital-yet-deficient form of governance under conditions of fragmentation, the article argues, the COVID-19 crisis not only denotes that time is not yet ripe to bid farewell to the f-word. It further points to the need to expand the fragmentation debate, going beyond its conflict- and court-centered focus, while probing new tools for tackling unsettled problems that arise from the segmentation of international law along sectoral lines.

Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic, fragmentation of international law, global governance, international cooperation, international law, international organizations, proliferation of international legal regimes, norms and institutions

Suggested Citation

Shlomo Agon, Sivan, Farewell to the F-Word? Fragmentation of International Law in Times of the COVID-19 Pandemic (January 1, 2021). University of Toronto Law Journal (Forthcoming 2022), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3932220 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3932220

Sivan Shlomo Agon (Contact Author)

Bar-Ilan University - Faculty of Law

Faculty of Law
Ramat Gan, 52900
Israel

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