
International Law's Invisible Frames
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Persons
Content
- Introduction
- 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
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