This paper utilizes “practice theory” to identify and analyze the everyday practices of international judges, with particular focus on practices associated with judicial decision-making. Examining judicial practices illuminates a wide range of otherwise hidden activities that shape international judicial opinions; provides a pathway toward uncovering the subjective understandings that international judges attach to their own behaviors; and reveals underlying causal processes and mechanisms that influence tribunal decisions. By opening the “black box” of international courts, the practice turn permits us to shed light on their inner workings, and thereby enrich our understanding of these increasingly important bodies
This article introduces a Thematic Section and theorizes the multiple ways that judicializing intern...
The judicialisation of international law is a relatively recent phenomenon that gained momentum in t...
This article addresses an issue with which federal courts have been forced to deal with increasing f...
This Article focuses on two phenomena that have emerged, and are likely to continue to emerge, from ...
In recent decades, international courts have proliferated the international systemâa trend often ref...
This article examines the judicial function of international courts by considering both what it is a...
The thesis attempts to bring coherence to the manner in which international courts and tribunals int...
Observers of international courts (ICs) note that several ICs carry out a broad range of non-judicia...
The paper starts with the effects of international courts on the broader public and narrows down to ...
International courts have been industrious over the past couple of decades. International courts su...
This chapter, in the Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication, provides an overview of the burg...
The phenomenon of judicial self-government at international courts has thus far been vastly understu...
This Article focuses on two phenomena that have emerged, and are likely to continue to emerge, from ...
Courts are known to be political actors. National courts play the political game in the national dom...
Reviewing Karen J. Alter, The New Terrain of International law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton ...
This article introduces a Thematic Section and theorizes the multiple ways that judicializing intern...
The judicialisation of international law is a relatively recent phenomenon that gained momentum in t...
This article addresses an issue with which federal courts have been forced to deal with increasing f...
This Article focuses on two phenomena that have emerged, and are likely to continue to emerge, from ...
In recent decades, international courts have proliferated the international systemâa trend often ref...
This article examines the judicial function of international courts by considering both what it is a...
The thesis attempts to bring coherence to the manner in which international courts and tribunals int...
Observers of international courts (ICs) note that several ICs carry out a broad range of non-judicia...
The paper starts with the effects of international courts on the broader public and narrows down to ...
International courts have been industrious over the past couple of decades. International courts su...
This chapter, in the Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication, provides an overview of the burg...
The phenomenon of judicial self-government at international courts has thus far been vastly understu...
This Article focuses on two phenomena that have emerged, and are likely to continue to emerge, from ...
Courts are known to be political actors. National courts play the political game in the national dom...
Reviewing Karen J. Alter, The New Terrain of International law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton ...
This article introduces a Thematic Section and theorizes the multiple ways that judicializing intern...
The judicialisation of international law is a relatively recent phenomenon that gained momentum in t...
This article addresses an issue with which federal courts have been forced to deal with increasing f...