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The Puzzle of Freedom:Structure and Agency in International Adjudication

Title / Series / Name
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Pages
Editors
Keywords
field sociology
international courts and tribunals
international Law
international organisations
legal interpretation
practice theory
social practices
structure and contingency
General Social Sciences
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/27903
Abstract
Like any other institutions, international courts are both constrained and free, structured and open-ended in their production of legal outcomes. Yet, after decades of investigation, the driving forces behind international adjudication remain somewhat elusive. If international norms are textually indeterminate, then what guides their interpretation and application to concrete cases? To what systemic pressures are courts subject? And what forms of discretion do they enjoy? This chapter begins to answer these questions by focusing on the micro-level practices, relationships, and struggles of the legal experts populating international judicial institutions. On the one hand, these socio-professional dynamics are constrained by existing social arrangements, including the institutional design of courts, the networked interactions among individual actors, and the competent performances that punctuate the adjudicative process. On the other hand, existing social arrangements are open to contestation, renegotiation, and contingency, thereby creating opportunities for unorthodox and creative lawyering. As such, the socio-professional dynamics that take place inside international courts are both the vehicle of reproduction of legal outcomes and the source from which legal change originates.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Book chapter
Date
2025
Language
ISBN
9781009552622
9781009552646
Identifiers
10.1017/9781009552646.011
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Unit