The Everyday Makers of International Law
From Great Halls to Back Rooms
Part of Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
- Author: Tommaso Soave, Central European University, Budapest
- Date Published: No date available
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781009248020
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This book offers a unique insight into the inner workings of international courts and tribunals. Combining the rigour of the essay and the creativity of the novel, Tommaso Soave narrates the invisible practices and interactions that make up the dispute settlement process, from the filing of the initial complaint to the issuance of the final decision. At each step, the book unravels the myriad activities of the legal experts running the international judiciary – judges, arbitrators, agents, counsel, advisors, bureaucrats, and specialized academics – and reveals their pervasive power in the process. The cooperation and competition among these inner circles of professionals lie at the heart of international judicial decisions. By shedding light on these social dynamics, Soave takes the reader on a journey through the lives, ambitions, and preoccupations of the everyday makers of international law.
Read more- Provides a detailed account of the intermediate steps that lead to the formation of international judgments and reveals the role of unseen actors in the process, illuminating the inner workings of international courts and tribunals for the benefit of international law practitioners and theorists alike
- Recasts international courts as a site of social relationships and professional practices, where important decisions are taken by ordinary men and women in hesitant and often circuitous ways, fundamentally challenging conventional understandings of international adjudication and exposing international lawyers to new and unfamiliar ways of thinking about their business
- Adopts a unique storytelling style that intersperses academic analysis with frequent forays into novelesque fiction, offering a fresh, genre-bending take on the study of international courts and tribunals, and questioning the disciplinary boundaries between law, political science, and social studies
Reviews & endorsements
'Recommended.' D. P. Forsythe, Choice
See more reviews'Written not as a monograph but almost in the style of a set of internal reflections-as-narratives, this book provides a seeming fly-in-the-wall contextual account to the many considerations that suffuse international judicial decisions and deliberations. To me, it was a significant reminder of what I had already seen from my own experiences of international practice at courts and tribunals - that such institutions remain very conscious of their judicial functions, while remaining quite unconscious of the complex humanity that drives all the seen and unseen players, hierarchies, and interactions within these august institutions that strive to provide international justice.' Diane Desierto, EJIL:Talk! (Blog of the European Journal of International Law)
'As Soave correctly points out, international courts are still shrouded in secrecy, which prevents outsiders from fully understanding how they operate. Soave makes the most significant contribution so far to lifting this veil, and his book provides material that will be tremendously useful not only to sociolegal scholars with an interest in international law, but also to practitioners who wish to understand how the courts before which they plead cases actually function.' Florian Grisel, Law and Social Inquiry
'Tommaso Soave's The Everyday Makers of International Law open[s] the black box of international institutional law and apply sociological as well as anthropological methods to study the people, spaces, and processes that create international law.' Silvia Steininger and Helga Molbæk-Steensig, EJIL:Talk!
'Soave's approach is unusual, but it works exceptionally well. … [His] book is relevant to those studying the decision-making of international (quasi)courts. IR scholars will benefit from Soave's empirically rich case-studies, on which they can build additional analyses. For those interested in creative methodologies or new approaches to writing, his book provides a stellar example of how to use fictional accounts within an academic publication.' Sassan Gholiagha, International Affairs
'[H]aving started as a sceptic, I ended up liking Soave's 'departure from canon': partly because for him to 'bend the genres' is a bold move that deserves respect in a discipline privileging safe, risk-free writing and partly because Soave writes in a distinctive style using accessible language. … Soave makes points that are far too rarely made in the orthodox accounts … [he] complements these standard accounts and succeeds where they largely fail - in acquainting readers with the everyday routines and micro-practices of international courts and tribunals. … this is what makes Soave's book stand out. It is a significant achievement.' Christian J. Tams, European Journal of International Law
'… Soave's apparent joy in writing his fictional vignettes is contagious. His text provides a vivid, memorable, and convincing behind-the-scenes description of the everyday life of those responsible for making international judicial decisions. This creative and challenging book brings to light an important set of actors and activities to which the scholarship has only turned its attention in the past decade or so. As any good scholarship, it leaves the reader with a taste for more, highlighting how much more unraveling remains to be done.' Tamar M. Egiddo, American Journal of International Law
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×Product details
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781009248020
- length: 377 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 20 mm
- weight: 0.546kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Carnegieplein 2, 10:00 am
2. Coffee, cigarettes, and international judicial practices
3. A new generation of litigators
4. Telling a story
5. The invisible army
6. The three wise monkeys
7. The lyophilization of life
8. The memo
9. To capture the world
10. Bricolage
11. The explorer
12. A four-letter word
13. What does it mean…
14. The stage
15. The moment of (constructed) truth
16. Truth woven together
17. Spijkermakersstraat 9, 8:00 pm.
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