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International law as behavior / edited by Harlan Grant Cohen, University of Georgia, Timothy Meyer, Vanderbilt University.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: ASIL studies in international legal theory | ASIL Studies in International Legal TheoryPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2021Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 296 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781316979792 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 341 23
LOC classification:
  • KZ3410 .I57533 2021
Online resources:
Contents:
International law as behavior : an agenda / Harlan Grant Cohen and Timothy Meyer -- Deadlines as behavior in diplomacy and international law / Jean Galbraith -- Cooperating without sanctions / Timothy Meyer -- Egocentric bias in perceptions of customary international law / Ryan M. Scoville -- Explaining the practical purchase of soft law : competing and complementary behavior hypotheses / Tomer Broude and Yahli Shereshevsky -- Toward an anthropology of international law / Galit A. Sarfaty -- Transnational collaborations in transitional justice / Elena Baylis -- Advancing neuroscience in international law / Anna Spain Bradley -- The missing persons of international law scholarship : a roadmap for future research / Tamar Megiddo -- The wrong way to weigh rights / Andrew Keane Woods.
Summary: This volume includes chapters from an exciting group of scholars at the cutting edge of their fields to present a multi-disciplinary look at how international law shapes behavior. Contributors present overviews of the progress established fields have made in analyzing questions of interest, as well as speculations on the questions or insights that emerging methods might raise. In some chapters, there is a focus on how a particular method might raise or help answer questions, while others focus on a particular international law topic by drawing from a variety of fields through a multi-method approach to highlight how these fields may come together in a single project. Still others use behavioral insights as a form of critique to highlight the blind spots and related mistakes in more traditional analyses of the law. Throughout this volume, authors present creative, insightful, challenges to traditional international law scholarship.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 19 Mar 2021).

International law as behavior : an agenda / Harlan Grant Cohen and Timothy Meyer -- Deadlines as behavior in diplomacy and international law / Jean Galbraith -- Cooperating without sanctions / Timothy Meyer -- Egocentric bias in perceptions of customary international law / Ryan M. Scoville -- Explaining the practical purchase of soft law : competing and complementary behavior hypotheses / Tomer Broude and Yahli Shereshevsky -- Toward an anthropology of international law / Galit A. Sarfaty -- Transnational collaborations in transitional justice / Elena Baylis -- Advancing neuroscience in international law / Anna Spain Bradley -- The missing persons of international law scholarship : a roadmap for future research / Tamar Megiddo -- The wrong way to weigh rights / Andrew Keane Woods.

This volume includes chapters from an exciting group of scholars at the cutting edge of their fields to present a multi-disciplinary look at how international law shapes behavior. Contributors present overviews of the progress established fields have made in analyzing questions of interest, as well as speculations on the questions or insights that emerging methods might raise. In some chapters, there is a focus on how a particular method might raise or help answer questions, while others focus on a particular international law topic by drawing from a variety of fields through a multi-method approach to highlight how these fields may come together in a single project. Still others use behavioral insights as a form of critique to highlight the blind spots and related mistakes in more traditional analyses of the law. Throughout this volume, authors present creative, insightful, challenges to traditional international law scholarship.

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