Interpretation International Law/
edited by Andrea Bianchi, Daniel Peat, Matthew Windsor
- Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.
- xxvii, 399 p. ; 24 cm.
I introduction
1 Playing the game of interpretation : On meaning and metaphor in international law
2 The game of interpretation in international law: The players , the card and why the game is worth the candle
II The object
3 Rhetoric persuasion, and interpretation in international law
4 The existential function of interpretation in international law
5 The multidimensional process of interpretation : content determination and law ascertainment distinguished
III The players
6 Interpretation and the international legal profession between duty and aspiration
7 Interpretive communities in international law
8 Interpretive authority and the international judiciary
IV The Rules
9 The vienna rules evolutionary interpretation and the intention of the parties
10 Accounting for different in treaty interpretation over time
11 Intrepretive transplanted treaty rules
V The strategies
12 A genealogy of texualism in treaty interpretation
13 Theorizing precedent in international law
14 Interpretation in international law as a trans-cultural project
VI Playing the game of game playing
15 Towards a politics of Hermeneutics
16 Cognitive frames of interpretation in international law
17 Is interpretation in international law a game ?
18 Interpretation
9780198725749
law International law--Interpretation and construction