Published online: 06 March 2017A recent editorial in this journal stressed the need to rearticulate the methodology-and thereby the distinctiveness - of international law in the context of blurring disciplinary lines between international law and international relations. The aim of this article is to contribute to the methodological aspect of the debate. First, the article outlines a legal empirical approach, which complements legal methodology of international law with empirical tools and techniques such as citation network analysis and corpus linguistics. Second, the article applies the approach on the case law of two European courts: the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), and the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). It dem...
Based on the ever increasing interpretation and application of international law by domestic courts,...
The present research investigates the formative processes of international criminal law through the ...
This paper argues that methodologies of interpretation do not do what they promise – they do not con...
Academics, practitioners and international and national courts are increasingly seeking to identify ...
While political scientists have become increasingly interested in the output of international courts...
International audienceIn this article we propose a novel methodology, which uses text similarity tec...
The chapter argues that the network approach is a viable methodology in legal empirical research, wh...
How do international adjudicators use precedent? This question has been addressed several times in t...
International litigation and arbitration hinges on the use (and, sometimes, misuse) of “authorities”...
Published online: 30 November 2021While some scholars, such as Stone Sweet and Ryan, describe Europe...
Over the years, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has received criticism for exercising its ter...
Special issue published online 31st January 2019 in cooperation with the Network of Empirical Legal ...
What role have international legal scholars played in the development of international criminal law?...
Based on the ever-increasing interpretation and application of international law by domestic courts,...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
Based on the ever increasing interpretation and application of international law by domestic courts,...
The present research investigates the formative processes of international criminal law through the ...
This paper argues that methodologies of interpretation do not do what they promise – they do not con...
Academics, practitioners and international and national courts are increasingly seeking to identify ...
While political scientists have become increasingly interested in the output of international courts...
International audienceIn this article we propose a novel methodology, which uses text similarity tec...
The chapter argues that the network approach is a viable methodology in legal empirical research, wh...
How do international adjudicators use precedent? This question has been addressed several times in t...
International litigation and arbitration hinges on the use (and, sometimes, misuse) of “authorities”...
Published online: 30 November 2021While some scholars, such as Stone Sweet and Ryan, describe Europe...
Over the years, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has received criticism for exercising its ter...
Special issue published online 31st January 2019 in cooperation with the Network of Empirical Legal ...
What role have international legal scholars played in the development of international criminal law?...
Based on the ever-increasing interpretation and application of international law by domestic courts,...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
Based on the ever increasing interpretation and application of international law by domestic courts,...
The present research investigates the formative processes of international criminal law through the ...
This paper argues that methodologies of interpretation do not do what they promise – they do not con...