International Law as Behavior
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Description
This book's goal is break down some of these barriers and provide a glimpse of what an international law more focused on behavior and more engaged with these other fields might look like. Part I of this chapter sets the scene, describing international law's long interest in behavior and past attempts to explore that relationship. Parts II and III describe the book's approach and lays out the contributions in each chapter. Part IV starts the process of bringing these insights together, outlining a series of takeaways for future study of international law as behavior.
Table of 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 : epistemic institutions versus credible commitments regimes in international law / 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
ISBN
9781316979792
Publication Date
3-2021
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
City
Cambridege, U.K.
Keywords
international law, diplomacy, sanctions, international cooperation, transnational, transitional justice
Disciplines
International Law
Repository Citation
Cohen, Harlan G. and Meyer, Timothy L., "International Law as Behavior" (2021). Books. 180.
https://digitalcommons.law.uga.edu/books/180