BEYOND BOUNDS: MOROCCO’S RIF WAR AND THE LIMITS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

Introduction: Sovereignty, Imperialism, and International Law

International law has long represented the ideals of global order and the aspiration for justice in governing the complex relationships that shape our modern world. Yet it is ultimately a mechanism designed to serve the national interests of sovereign states and contains significant loopholes that condition its application to other global actors. Juxtaposing two seemingly separate historical events—the signing of the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of poison gas in war and Spain’s simultaneous gas bombing of Morocco’s northern Rif region—exposes the shortfalls of international law in dealing with conflicts between sovereign and nonsovereign powers, as well as emphasizes the implicit role humanitarian law plays in bolstering imperial regimes.

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Contributors
About Anna Chotzen

Alumna of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and an honors graduate of the Department of History. Her essay in Humanity 5.1 was originally submitted as a longer work for her honors thesis. She has been the recipient of several awards and a fellowship for this essay, including the Hilldale Undergraduate/Faculty Research Fellowship, with which she conducted archival research, and the Fred Harvey Harrington Prize for best undergraduate history thesis. She was also the recipient of a FLAS Fellowship for Arabic.