JOURNAL ARTICLE

Regulation of armed conflict: critical comparativism

Nesrine Badawi

Year: 2016 Journal:   Third World Quarterly Vol: 37 (11)Pages: 1990-2009   Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Abstract

This paper calls for comparative analysis of international humanitarian law and Islamic laws regulating armed conflict by focusing on the underlying assumptions and interests informing both systems (rather than on rule-based comparison). It argues that examination of the biases inherent to each legal system can potentially inform scholars to understand better the paradigms shaping each of them. In doing so, the paper builds on contextual and critical interpretations of both fields of law to assert the need for ‘critical comparativism’ rather than functionalist comparativism. Unlike functionalist comparativism, which treats international law as the ‘objective’ benchmark against which other legal traditions are measured, ‘critical comparativism’ treats the two legal systems examined as alternative manifestations of power structures which, when contrasted against each other, help shed more light on the inherent bias in each legal system.

Keywords:
Political science Comparative law International law Law Epistemology Law and economics Sociology Philosophy

Metrics

8
Cited By
1.39
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
51
Refs
0.89
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

International Law and Human Rights
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Political Science and International Relations
Global Peace and Security Dynamics
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Political Science and International Relations
Historical and Contemporary Political Dynamics
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  History

Related Documents

© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.