This essay argues that international legal discourses function as a deeply entrenched routine composed of a great variety of professional habits. This essay grapples with one of these shared habits constitutive of the routine of international lawyers, namely what international lawyers refer to as ‘methods’. Methods, it is argued here, are among the most central of all the habits constitutive of the routine of international lawyers, in that methods help the routine to conceal what it does. More specifically, this essay claims that the methods deployed by international lawyers enshroud international legal discourses with both novelty and vulnerability, thereby camouflaging the tragedy and cynicism of the routine of international lawyers.
Friday, December 13, 2019
d'Aspremont: International Legal Methods: Working for a Tragic and Cynical Routine
Jean d'Aspremont (Sciences Po - Law; Univ. of Manchester - Law) has posted International Legal Methods: Working for a Tragic and Cynical Routine (in Handbook on Research Methods in International Law, Rossana Deplano & Nicholas Tsagourias eds., forthcoming). Here's the abstract: