
Alessandra Silveira [Editor of this blog, Coordinator of Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence “Digital Citizenship and Technological Sustainability” (CitDig), University of Minho]
In the week marking the fourth anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, a new book by Francisco Pereira Coutinho, Professor of public international law and European constitutional law at NOVA University Lisbon, was launched in Portugal. I had the pleasure of presenting the work on February 26, together with Pedro Froufe, editor of this blog. Right at the beginning of the book, entitled “Guerra, mentiras e direito internacional”[1] – which directly translates to English as “War, lies and international law” –, the author explains what his main motivation was: he wanted to tell the story of the invasion of Ukraine from the perspective of an expert in international law. He then gathered the questions that his colleagues and journalists had asked him – as he is also a commentator for CNN Portugal – and the result is, in my view, a compelling and courageous manifesto in defence of international law.
As the metaphor on the book cover says, international law does not cease to exist because it is violated, just as grammar does not disappear because someone writes poorly. However, continuous violations of the rules can render them meaningless. This is because law (in general) is an abstraction – it only works when those subject to the rules recognise their legitimacy and comply with them, above all because they understand that it is worth maintaining peace, security, order and justice. But in the (specific) field of international law, the weaknesses of the law are more evident, because the recipients of the rules are sovereign states, which, if they have sufficient strength to do so, simply abandon their moral compass and cease to comply with the agreed rules – and who is going to rise up against brute force?
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