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Diplomatic gifts are deeply paradoxical: they signal ‘peace’ between polities constituted by ‘power’ (peace-and-power-paradox); they are exchanged between rulers of contiguous territories so as to momentarily signal a merger of separate entities (paradox of overlapping sovereignties). This essay uses a systems-theoretical approach to uncover this paradox in national laws of state awards. The analysis culminates in a conjectural legal norm prohibiting states to use diplomatic gifts, or, to the extreme, a paradoxical norm containing the self-negation and self-prohibition of diplomacy. The essay finally discusses how the peace-and-power-paradox and its invisibilisation permeates the whole system of diplomacy.
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This page is a summary of: Diplomacy’s Paradox in the Law of State Awards, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy, February 2021, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1163/1871191x-bja10062.
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