Abstract
This article examines, through a theoretical lens, two issues concerning equality
under international law thrown up by the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War: the equal
treatment of belligerents on different sides under international humanitarian law (IHL),
which is being contested by revisionist just war theorists, and the unequal treatment of
Ukrainians with different genders assigned at birth who are trying to flee Ukraine, which
is being contested under international human rights law (IHRL). By examining different
conceptions of equality through the lens of social ontology, this article distinguishes
between the regulatory focus of IHL on individual agency and the regulatory focus of
IHRL on social structures, which directly influence how ‘difference’ and ‘sameness’ are
recognized and determined for the purpose of conceptualizing equality. Because of
IHL’s focus on individuals, whose agency is limited in war, only highly agential conduct
(e.g. targeting civilians) makes a ‘difference’ under IHL. Meanwhile, outside IHL’s
regulatory focus, the different causes of states’ participation in war are evened out as
the ‘same’ structured positions occupied by different individuals, warranting their same
treatment according to belligerent equality. On the other hand, because of IHRL’s focus
on social structures, which heavily condition the individuals, structural arrangements
make a ‘difference’ under IHRL. Outside IHRL’s regulatory focus, individuals’ different
innate characteristics such as sexual characteristics are evened out as the ‘same’
agential quality of being human, warranting their same treatment according to sex
equality. The article argues that the contestations about these equality principles
find deeper roots in their divergent social ontological visions, the revelation of which
can open up new spaces for dialogue on and inquiry into a common social world that
grounds the legal conceptions of equality.