Abstract

Conventional wisdom holds that international is a temporary byproduct of war. The international law of is grounded in this assumption and consists of a substantive norm of interim administration with limited discretion on the part of the occupant and a procedural norm of unilateralism. Yet many observers of the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan intuitively sense that modern occupations are somehow different and that new or changed rules apply. That intuition is correct. This Article describes the emergence of a new regime of and an emerging facto modern law of occupation that break dramatically from past practice and the de jure law of occupation. The substantive norm of this new model is nation-building and the procedural norm is multilateralism. The assumptions and parameters of the de jure law of are outdated and incapable of providing a meaningful legal framework for modern occupations. What are the consequences of this new model of and the resultant lacuna of applicable international law? The of Iraq illustrates a paradigm shift in the practice of and proves that the resource and legitimacy needs of modern occupations create an invisible hand that pushes occupying powers toward international cooperation and compliance with international norms of behavior. At the same time, however, the era of multilateral contains defects because its de facto rules lack the advantages of positive law and the legal status of territory occupied by the United Nations is ambiguous.

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