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Title:Reflexivity and the uncovering of silence in international law Author(s):KORNIOTI, NadiaDate:2022Type:Working PaperSeries/Number:EUI LAW; 2022/08; Practising Reflexivity in International LawAbstract:New approaches, vocabularies and discussions that have been taking place in legal academia, have opened the way for innovation in the way we think and talk about international law. However, the choice of concrete research ...
Title:Running a never-ending race to catch up with the western international lawyers Author(s):EMTSEVA, JuliaDate:2022Type:Working PaperSeries/Number:EUI LAW; 2022/06; Practising Reflexivity in International LawAbstract:For a long time, discussions on the diversity of international legal academia and practice have not been properly addressed. Protagonists from the Global South were not even considered as relevant issue-setters of international ...
Title:The two faces of the invisible college : cooperation and competition in the international judicial community Author(s):SOAVE, TommasoDate:2022Type:Working PaperSeries/Number:EUI LAW; 2022/09; Practising Reflexivity in International LawAbstract:Over the last 50 years, the invisible college theorized by Oscar Schachter has burgeoned into a full-blown profession attracting ever-growing numbers of individuals and institutions. Today, its centre is occupied by a tight ...
Title:The use of external judicial decisions by regional human rights courts Author(s):CHRISTENSEN, Martin LolleDate:2021Citation:
- Florence : European University Institute, 2021
Type:ThesisSeries/Number:EUI PhD theses; Department of LawAbstract:There are currently three regional human rights courts active on three continents. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights are already well-established courts within their regional ...
Title:Networks and narrative : visualizing international law Author(s):CHRISTENSEN, Martin LolleDate:2021Citation:
- European journal of legal studies, 2021, Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 27-43
Type:ArticleAbstract:This article explores the role of narratives in the use of information visualization by international legal scholars. It adds theoretical depth to the choice of visualization and connects different strands of international ...
Title:Customary international law and human rights law : an impossible relationship? : exploring customary international law’s 'vitality paradox' Author(s):TITBERIDZE, Maia
Date:2021Citation:
- Florence : European University Institute, 2021
Type:ThesisSeries/Number:EUI PhD theses; Department of LawAbstract:Custom remains a widely discussed source of international law even if its unwritten nature has raised more questions than it has provided answers. At the same time, rarely do discussions regarding customary international ...

Title:Administration of Justice in the WTO: Did the WTO Appellate Body Commit ‘Grave Injustice’? Author(s):PETERSMANN, Ernst-Ulrich
Date:2009Citation:
- The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals, 2009, 8, 3, 329-373
Type:ArticleAbstract: is not only done, but also seen to be done', albeit subject to 'trial and error'. Legal practitioners should support - and, as part of the 'invisible college of international lawyers', hold accountable - the emergence of ...
