Chagos: Dispossession and Exile in Paradise
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2021Abstract
The expulsion of Chagossians in the late 1960s and early 1970s by British authorities
resulted in the dispossession of the whole population and the survival of colonialism in
the Indian Ocean. Following decades of resistance, the International Court of Justice’s
advisory opinion of 2019 condemned the British continued administration and required
the decolonisation of the archipelago. This project investigates to what extent ICJ’s
opinion is based upon colonial grounds and how it has affected the Chagossian
community to challenge their current situation of exile and dispossession. To this end,
content analysis of primary and secondary sources was conducted while postcolonial
theory provided the conceptual underpinnings. Through the development of the thesis,
the paper identifies several colonial grounds in ICJ’s opinion. Among them, the non-
questioning of the obtention of British sovereignty, the reliance on colonial borders, and
the non-identification of Chagossians as the concerned peoples for self-determination.
Given the importance of these argumentations for the decolonisation process laid by the
Court, the paper ascertains that ICJ’s advisory opinion did not provide increased
autonomy and agency to Chagossians. Therefore, the exiles cannot challenge their
situation of dispossession by themselves and remain subject to the decisions taken by
other sovereign entities.
Document Type
Project / Final year job or degree
Language
English
Keywords
Postcolonialisme
Descolonització
Dret internacional
Chagos
TFG
Relacions internacionals
Pages
61 p.
Note
TFG del Grau en Relacions Internacionals tutoritzat per Mariona Lloret Rodà
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Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/