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5 - “Call Me Again If You’re Ever Ready to Begin Answering the Questions”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2021

Lianne J. M. Boer
Affiliation:
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
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Summary

This chapter inquires into the way the most prominent figure in the cyberwar discourse, Michael Schmitt, constructs his authority in his presentations. It concludes that these presentations entail a kind of map-drawing: the first part of the chapter shows how Schmitt relates to ‘time’ by positioning himself as well as the Tallinn Manual within the past, present and future of international legal thinking. The second part of the chapter shows how he constructs a spatial map of the field within which he functions and discursively relates to several ‘others’: nonlawyers; other(s) (lawyers) who, in his view, misinterpret international law as well as those he refers to as “pure academics”; third, the group of experts involved in the composition of the Manual; and finally, himself in the third person. Following the construal of all these links, what is left at the heart of the discursive map is Schmitt himself, holding the key to legal knowledge as well as functioning as gatekeeper for those he considers suitable to partake in the cyberwar debate.

Type
Chapter
Information
International Law As We Know It
Cyberwar Discourse and the Construction of Knowledge in International Legal Scholarship
, pp. 127 - 169
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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