Description
Book SynopsisThis innovative edited collection uncovers the invisible frames which form our understanding of international law. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, it investigates how social cognition and knowledge production processes affect decision-making, and inform unquestioned beliefs about what international law is, and how it works.
Trade ReviewThe encounter and the confrontation that lie at the core of the book -or, if you prefer, the invisible frames that tie together these contributions by these international lawyers- constitute one of the most fascinating aspects of the book's hydrography. * Tommaso Soave, The American Journal of International Law *
Table of ContentsIntroduction Section I. Social Cognition: Foregrounding Information Processing and Recontextualizing International Law 1: Moshe Hirsch: Social Cognitive Studies, Sociological Theory, and International Law 2: Anne van Aaken and Jan-Philip Elm: Framing in and Through Public International Law 3: Ingo Venzke: Cognitive Biases and International Law: What's the Point of Critique? 4: Jacob Livingston Slosser and5 Mikael Rask Madsen: Institutionally Embodied Law: Cognitive Linguistics and the Making of International Law 5: Tomer Broude: Prosociality, International Law, and Humanitarian Intervention 6: Jean d'Aspremont: A Worldly Law in a Legal World 7: Shiri Krebs: The Invisible Frames Affecting Wartime Investigations: Legal Epistemology, Metaphors, and Cognitive Biases 8: Margherita Melillo: Labels as the Visible Part of International Law's Invisible Frames: The Case of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control as an 'Evidence-Based' Treaty Section II. Making Knowledge Production Visible: Structures, Actors, and Processes 9: Andrea Bianchi: Knowledge Production in International Law: Forces and Processes 10: Akbar Rasulov: The Discipline as a Field of Struggle: The Politics and Economics of Knowledge Production in International Law 11: Jan Klabbers: Reflections on the ITU: International Organizations as Epistemic Structures 12: Harlan Grant Cohen: Metaphors of International Law 13: Matthew Windsor: Counterstorytelling in International Economic Law 14: Eyal Benvenisti and Doreen Lustig: Revisiting the Memory of Solferino: Knowledge Production and the Laws of War 15: Tamar Megiddo: Knowledge Production, Big Data, and Data-Driven Customary International Law 16: Ana Luísa Bernardino: Going by the Book - What International Law Textbooks Teach Us Not To Learn