The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics
The application of law in South East Asia frustrates many scholars due to its subliminal character. I call this subliminal form of law ‘legalism’. This article adopts the method of historical sociology to trace three evolutionary phases in South East Asia’s international history of legalism to illum...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1452642023-03-05T17:23:57Z The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics Chong, Alan S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Centre for Multilateralism Studies Social sciences::General Law International Law The application of law in South East Asia frustrates many scholars due to its subliminal character. I call this subliminal form of law ‘legalism’. This article adopts the method of historical sociology to trace three evolutionary phases in South East Asia’s international history of legalism to illuminate the cumulative mixture of informality beneath formality in the practice of legalism via ‘social morality’. In pre-colonial times, divinely-guided moral censure and the ethical reputation of particular rulers passed for proto-intersocietal law. In colonial times, international law was foisted by Western powers onto the informal social morality of the region, resulting in power politics operating behind legal manoeuvres. The advent of ASEAN saw a reversion to a preference for even greater informality and soft law. Finally, the post-colonial era witnessed experimentation with Westphalian international law. This has resulted nowadays in a cumulative halfway house of soft legalism operated through diplomatic social morality. Published version 2020-12-16T03:52:37Z 2020-12-16T03:52:37Z 2019 Journal Article Chong, A. (2019). The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics. South East Asia Research, 27(4), 418-436. doi:10.1080/0967828X.2019.1702375 0967-828X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145264 10.1080/0967828X.2019.1702375 4 27 418 436 en South East Asia Research © 2019 SOAS University of London. All rights reserved. This paper was published in South East Asia Research and is made available with permission of SOAS University of London. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::General Law International Law Chong, Alan The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
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The application of law in South East Asia frustrates many scholars due to its subliminal character. I call this subliminal form of law ‘legalism’. This article adopts the method of historical sociology to trace three evolutionary phases in South East Asia’s international history of legalism to illuminate the cumulative mixture of informality beneath formality in the practice of legalism via ‘social morality’. In pre-colonial times, divinely-guided moral censure and the ethical reputation of particular rulers passed for proto-intersocietal law. In colonial times, international law was foisted by Western powers onto the informal social morality of the region, resulting in power politics operating behind legal manoeuvres. The advent of ASEAN saw a reversion to a preference for even greater informality and soft law. Finally, the post-colonial era witnessed experimentation with Westphalian international law. This has resulted nowadays in a cumulative halfway house of soft legalism operated through diplomatic social morality. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Chong, Alan |
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Article |
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Chong, Alan |
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Chong, Alan |
title |
The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
title_short |
The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
title_full |
The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
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The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
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The unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in South East Asian international politics |
title_sort |
unbearable lightness of legalism : the historical role of social morality in south east asian international politics |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145264 |
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