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THE INFLUENCE OF TEACHINGS OF PUBLICISTS ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2016

Sandesh Sivakumaran*
Affiliation:
Professor of Public International Law, University of Nottingham, sandesh.sivakumaran@nottingham.ac.uk.
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Abstract

This article considers the influence of teachings of publicists on the development of international law. The category of ‘teachings of publicists’ is not a homogeneous one. The article argues that it can be divided into: entities that have been empowered by States to conclude teachings, such as the International Law Commission; expert groups, such as the Institut de Droit International; and ‘ordinary’ publicists. The teachings of ordinary publicists are also of different types and include digests, treatises, textbooks, monographs, journal articles, and blog posts. Only by breaking down the category into its various types can the influence of the teaching of publicists on the development of international law be properly gauged. Even then, it can prove rather difficult to pin down the notion of ‘influence’. Standard assessments of influence focus on the extent to which teachings are cited by courts and tribunals, in particular by the International Court of Justice. However, that approach privileges the role of courts and tribunals in the development of international law and overlooks the role of other actors. As such, the present article offers a different assessment of influence. It identifies the actors that comprise the community of international lawyers and analyses the various interactions that take place between these actors and the teachings of publicists. It is through this interaction, of which citation is but part, that the influence of the teachings of publicists can properly be determined.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2016 

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I. Introduction

Once upon a time, the teachings of publicists were considered hugely significant. The writings of Suarez, Grotius, and Vattel, for example, had a profound effect on the structure and content of international law. In the nineteenth century, judicial decisions and the literature were littered with references to the founding fathers and ‘resemble[d] catalogues of the praises of famous men’.Footnote 1 This continued into the early part of the twentieth century: ‘Hear also what Hall sayeth. Hear the comfortable words of Oppenheim’ was a reflection of the literature and case law of the period.Footnote 2

By the late twentieth century, the common view, including among publicists themselves, was that the teachings of publicists had become far less influential.Footnote 3 The decline in influence, it is said, is due to the maturation of international law since the era of the founding fathers. With the growth in the number of courts and tribunals that operate, and the rich jurisprudence that comes with it, there is less of a need to turn to the teachings of publicists.Footnote 4 The influence that publicists have on the development of international law at present is contested. Some suggest that scholars ‘may be tempted to see their offerings as more influential than they really are’,Footnote 5 while others contend that the significance of publicists’ work tends to be downplayed,Footnote 6 even that publicists ‘typically have an unjustified modesty about their own influence’.Footnote 7

Part of the difficulty in gauging the influence of the teachings of publicists is that the category is not a homogeneous one. There are very many ‘publicists’ of rather different types. This is the focus of section II. It is well accepted that not all publicists are of equal stature: there are publicists and there are publicists. This does not mean simply that certain publicists are more influential than others—that hardly need be said. Rather, there are different types of publicists. This article contends that the category of publicist can be broken down into at least three types: entities that have been empowered by States to conclude teachings, such as the International Law Commission; expert groups, both standing and ad hoc; and ‘ordinary’ publicists.

Regard must also be had to the different types of ‘teachings’ of publicists. This is the subject of section III. Much has been made of teachings that canvass State practice. In a passage from the Paquete Habana, which has been often repeated, the US Supreme Court observed that, ‘where there is no treaty and no controlling executive or legislative act or judicial decision, resort must be had to the customs and usages of civilized nations, and, as evidence of these, to the works of jurists and commentators who by years of labour, research, and experience have made themselves peculiarly well acquainted with the subjects of which they treat. Such works are resorted to by judicial tribunals not for the speculations of their authors concerning what the law ought to be, but for trustworthy evidence of what the law really is.’Footnote 8 However, as with the category of publicists, teachings are also of different types. They include digests, which do canvass State practice, but also treatises, textbooks, monographs, commentaries, journal articles, and blog posts. It is important to break down the category of ‘teaching’ into its various types, as different types of teachings serve different purposes and are of benefit to different audiences.

Only by breaking down the category of teachings of publicists into its various types can their influence on the development of international law be properly gauged.

A second major difficulty with the determination of the influence of teachings relates to the assessment of ‘influence’. The standard view in the literature is to assess influence by the extent to which teachings are cited by courts and tribunals, particularly by the International Court of Justice. Brownlie's Principles of Public International Law is typical in this regard:

Whatever the grounds for caution, the opinions of publicists enjoy wide use. Arbitral tribunals and national courts make sometimes copious reference to jurists’ writings. National courts are generally unfamiliar with State practice and are ready to rely on secondary sources as a substitute. Ostensibly the International Court might seem to make little or no use of jurists’ writings. However this is because of the process of collective drafting of judgments, and the need to avoid an invidious selection of citations. The fact that the Court makes use of writers’ work is evidenced by dissenting and separate opinions, in which the ‘workings’ are set out in more detail, and which reflect the Court's actual methods. There are many references to writers in pleadings before the Court.Footnote 9

As will be discussed in section IV, citation by courts and tribunals is indeed a useful measure of influence. A citation provides the link between the work being cited and the individual doing the citing. However, citation is not the same as influence; and lack of citation does not necessarily mean lack of influence. More importantly, citation by courts and tribunals is only one measure of influence. To focus on courts and tribunals is to focus only on one set of actors that are involved in the development of international law.

A better approach to determining influence, this article suggests, is to identify the various actors that are involved in the development of international law, such as States, courts, and publicists, and analyse the interactions that take place between these actors and the teachings of publicists. It is through this interaction, of which citation is but part, that the influence of the teachings of publicists can properly be determined. In order to demonstrate the continued influence of teachings, breaking with convention, the work of living authors is considered.

II. The Notion of ‘Publicists’

The notion of a ‘publicist’, the term that is used in Article 38(1)(d) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, is an ambiguous one. During the drafting of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, members of the Advisory Committee of Jurists referred interchangeably to ‘authors’, ‘writers’, ‘jurists’ and ‘publicists’.Footnote 10 The Committee agreed on the term ‘writers’, but this was amended by the Drafting Committee to the term ‘publicists’; in both cases the French term ‘publicistes’ was used.Footnote 11 The Committee did not expand on the meaning of the term.Footnote 12 Over time, the notion of a ‘publicist’ has been interpreted broadly. It has been taken to include publicists in the ordinary sense, that is to say a textbook writer or an author of a learned monograph; but also bodies such as the International Law Commission,Footnote 13 the International Committee of the Red Cross,Footnote 14 the International Law Association,Footnote 15 and the Institut de Droit International.Footnote 16

This article contends that the category of publicist can be broken down into at least three broad sub-categories: entities that have been empowered by States to produce teachings; expert groups; and ordinary writers.Footnote 17 Furthermore, it is important to break down the category of publicist in order to identify the particular contribution of each type of publicist to the development of international law.

A. State-Empowered Entities

The first category of publicist is the publicist that has been empowered by States to draw up a particular teaching. A number of entities have been created by States, or otherwise later empowered by States, and ‘granted authority to make decisions or take actions, such as developing, interpreting, applying, and enforcing international law’.Footnote 18 These entities are of different types, and some of the work they undertake involves the conclusion of teachings.

The International Law Commission (ILC), for example, was established by the UN General Assembly, which was itself established by States.Footnote 19 It has a mandate to codify and progressively develop international law,Footnote 20 and, on this basis, has produced draft Articles and other works. Another example is the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which was created by the UN General Assembly and is empowered to promote ‘the conclusion and ratification of international conventions for the protection of refugees, supervis[e] their application and propos[e] amendments thereto’.Footnote 21 At the suggestion of a State, UNHCR's Executive Committee, itself composed of States, requested UNHCR ‘to consider the possibility of issuing—for the guidance of governments—a handbook relating to procedures and criteria for determining refugee status’.Footnote 22 UNHCR thus published its Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees.Footnote 23 The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is of a somewhat different order, but still falls within the notion of a State-empowered entity. Although the ICRC was created by a group of private individuals and not by States, it was later empowered by States to carry out various functions, thus satisfying the ‘empowerment’ aspect of a State-empowered entity. The Statutes of the International Red Cross Movement, which were adopted by the International Conference of the Red Cross,Footnote 24 provide that the role of the ICRC is ‘to work for the understanding and dissemination of knowledge of international humanitarian law applicable in armed conflicts and to prepare any development thereof’ and ‘to carry out mandates entrusted to it by the International Conference’.Footnote 25 With this mandate in mind, the ICRC has published Commentaries on the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocols and, at the request of the International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, a Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law.

There are numerous instances of a teaching of a State-empowered entity positing the existence of a norm, or suggesting an idea, before being picked up by States or in a judicial decision. The ILC, for example, has introduced many a novel idea into general international law. Today, the starting point of any discussion on the law of State responsibility is the ILC's Articles on that subject. Indeed, a 2007 report of the UN Secretary-General found that the draft articles had been cited in some 129 cases.Footnote 26 Outside the topic of State responsibility, States have concluded treaties on the basis of ILC draft Articles, including the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (1969), the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961), and the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and their Property (2004). Terminology used by the ILC, such as ‘contracting state’, ‘provisional application’ and ‘consent to be bound’ in the law of treaties, has also passed into general international law.Footnote 27

The teachings of State-empowered entities are thus of a different order to the teachings of publicists without a connection to a State.Footnote 28 Indeed, from a non-formalist perspective, State-empowered entities might best not be considered publicists at all. State-empowered entities have a close relationship with States in a way that ordinary publicists do not. They are empowered by States to carry out a law-making function broadly defined—for present purposes, to develop a teaching. States usually have a say in the election or appointment of individuals to the entity. States also have a role to play in the content of the teaching, for example, submitting their views to the entity or otherwise being involved in the drafting process. In addition, States have an important role to play following the finalization of the teaching, for example, accepting it or rejecting it.Footnote 29

Thus, the teachings of State-empowered entities prove useful, in part, because they can be traced back to States. The importance of the mandate of the entity comes through from cases in which the teachings of State-empowered entities have been cited. For example, in the House of Lords, Lord Steyn expressed the view that ‘[i]t is not surprising … that the UNHCR Handbook … has high persuasive authority, and is much relied on by domestic courts and tribunals’ because ‘[u]nder articles 35 and 36 of the [Refugee] Convention, and under article II of the Protocol of 1967, the UNHCR plays a critical role in the application of the Refugee Convention’ and that ‘[c]ontracting states are obliged to co-operate with UNHCR’.Footnote 30 Also important is the expertise of the entity, suggesting a certain level of knowledge, experience, and reputation. Justice Kirby of the High Court of Australia thus referred to the UNHCR Handbook and Guidelines because ‘of the expertise of the UNHCR in the application of the Convention’, the competence of UNHCR to ensure a ‘correct’ interpretation of the Convention, and the obligation of States parties to the Refugee Convention to co-operate with UNHCR and facilitate ‘its duty of supervising the application of the provisions of [the] Convention’.Footnote 31 Along similar lines, particular weight is given to the views of the ICRC ‘given its role in the development of international humanitarian law and the initiatives it has taken’.Footnote 32

B. Expert Groups

A second category of publicist is the expert group or learned society that does not have a mandate from States. The category in question includes groups that are permanent in nature, such as the Institut de Droit International and the International Law Association, as well as groups that are established to carry out a specific project and then cease to operate, such as the group that produced the Maastricht Principles on Extraterritorial Obligations of States in the area of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights.

Expert groups have not infrequently been the originators of new norms, approaches, and ideas. The International Law Association's Helsinki Rules on the Uses of the Waters of International Rivers (1966) is a case in point.Footnote 33 The Rules have been recognized as constituting customary international law,Footnote 34 and have influenced States in their adoption of instruments.Footnote 35 The Helsinki Rules also influenced the ILC's work on the subject;Footnote 36 and the UN Convention on the law of the non-navigational uses of international watercourses is based on the work of the ILA, the Institut de Droit International, and the ILC.Footnote 37

Another pertinent example is the group of experts that drafted the San Remo Manual on International Law applicable to Armed Conflicts at Sea. The military manuals of States published since the adoption of the San Remo Manual draw heavily on it. For example, the UK Manual on the Law of Armed Conflict notes that ‘[t]he San Remo Manual is a valuable reference work and much of the present chapter reflects its content. When appropriate and possible the text of the San Remo Manual has been repeated in this chapter.’Footnote 38 For its part, the Canadian Manual provides that the chapter on the law relating to the conduct of hostilities at sea is ‘derived from’ the San Remo Manual.Footnote 39

The San Remo Manual is a good example of the influence of writings of publicists also because it demonstrates the potential of writings of individual publicists. On the issue of exclusion zones in the law of armed conflict at sea, the group of experts largely based their approach on an article by William Fenrick, who was himself one of the experts.Footnote 40 The group of experts used the Fenrick article ‘as the basis for further study’ regarding the issue of exclusion zones,Footnote 41 and the influence of Fenrick's article is readily apparent. The rapporteur indicated that he shared the view of Fenrick that ‘the exercise of rights by belligerents in the zone are contingent upon a number of conditions’ and set out the same types of conditions as are discussed in the Fenrick article.Footnote 42 More concretely, the commentary to the section on exclusion zones in the San Remo Manual reproduces passages from the Fenrick article almost verbatim.Footnote 43

The work of some expert groups has thus had a considerable impact on the law. However, the point should not be overstated, as the work of other expert groups has not had a noticeable effect. There does not seem to be an appreciable reason as to why the work of some groups has profoundly influenced the law while the work of other groups, equally distinguished, has not. Indeed, even though certain work-products of a group have exercised influence, other work-products of the same group have not.

The teachings of expert groups are considered to be particularly important and of a different order to those of ordinary publicists. Rosenne, for example, notes that ‘[i]n the context of the teachings of the most highly qualified publicists, a special place is reserved for the works of scientific organizations devoted to international law’, including the ILC, UNCITRAL, the Institute of International Law and the International Law Association.Footnote 44 Along similar lines, Wolfke has noted that draft codifications of scientific societies ‘even if not accepted in extenso, are always taken into account, and have a strong bearing on the direction of developments of customary law in the given field of international life.’Footnote 45 At the same time, the teachings of expert groups are fundamentally different from the teachings of State-empowered entities due to the lack of a mandate from States to prepare teachings and the inability to trace the teachings back to States.

A number of reasons explain the particular influence of expert groups. Of particular importance is their actual expertise. An expert group has to be made up of ‘experts’. For example, the Institut de Droit International is composed of leading international lawyers. The aforementioned group of experts that drafted the San Remo Manual included military lawyers, naval lawyers, government lawyers, ICRC lawyers, and leading academics. In this way, the knowledge and experience of numerous individuals, of various backgrounds, is accumulated and a shared view of the law is presented. If a large number of recognized experts have indicated the state of the law in a particular teaching, it becomes more difficult—though by no means impossible—to disagree with it.

The composition of the expert group can also prove important. Where the composition of the group takes into account geographical distribution, it is likely to be considered more representative and thus potentially more influential than a group that is solely from the global north or global south.Footnote 46 It also avoids the criticism that is not infrequently directed at individual publicists, namely that a nationalist position is being taken.Footnote 47 This is of particular importance when strongly divergent views are held on the issue under consideration.

The process through which the teaching is created is also of relevance. If interested actors have an opportunity to feed into the process that gives rise to the teaching, it not only makes it more rigorous and more realistic, but is more likely to lead to their buy-in to the final product. This includes having interested actors participate as members or observers of expert groups, provide comments on drafts, or otherwise feed into the process.

C. The ‘Ordinary’ Publicist

Perhaps the category which is most familiar is that of the ‘ordinary’ publicist.Footnote 48 Teachings of individual publicists also contribute to the emergence of new ideas. For example, the tripartite ‘respect, protect and fulfil’ framework, familiar to anyone working with economic, social, and cultural rights, has its origins in work by Henry Shue and Asbjørn Eide. In a book published in 1980, Shue referred to duties ‘to avoid depriving’, ‘to protect from deprivation’, and ‘to aid the deprived’.Footnote 49 He thus moved the discussion away from a single duty for each right. Around the same time, Eide developed the threefold typology that is used today—the obligation to respect, protect and fulfil.Footnote 50 He published the typology in academic writing,Footnote 51 and later in a report in his capacity as Special Rapporteur of the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities.Footnote 52 This tripartite framework has been followed, among others, by the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,Footnote 53 and now reflects orthodox thinking on the subject.

Along related lines, the right to development has been traced back to a lecture by Keba M'Baye at the International Institute of Human Rights.Footnote 54 In that lecture, subsequently published, M'Baye distinguished between ‘le droit du développement’ and ‘le droit au développement’ and argued for a right to development. A few years later, the Commission on Human Rights, under the chairmanship of M'Baye, adopted a resolution which recommended that ECOSOC invite the Secretary-General to undertake a study on the matter.Footnote 55 A study was prepared,Footnote 56 which was considered by the Commission, and a resolution adopted, which ‘reiterate[d] that the right to development is a human right’.Footnote 57 The General Assembly later declared that ‘the right to development is a human right’,Footnote 58 and some years later, the Declaration on the Right to Development was adopted by 146 votes to 1 with 8 abstentions.Footnote 59

There is no discernible reason as to why the teachings of one individual publicist are taken up and not those of another. However, as will be seen in section IV.C, an individual publicist who also has another role, such as a member of an expert group, or a UN expert, can have particular influence. As with expert groups, the expertise of an individual publicist and the quality of his or her teachings are of particular importance. The eminence of an individual publicist, usually based on his or her expertise, but also on associated factors such as title and reputation, can also affect the weight to be given to the work. In this way, the user can rest assured that the propositions stated in the work are reliable.

Courts and tribunals not infrequently signal the expertise of an individual publicist through the way in which they are described. Individual publicists are sometimes described as ‘eminent’Footnote 60 or ‘learned’.Footnote 61 Others are introduced by their title of ‘Dr’ or ‘Professor’.Footnote 62 The job titles or institutional affiliation of still others are included, for example, ‘Professor Parry of Cambridge University’ or ‘the eminent Louis B. Sohn, the emeritus Bemis Professor of International Law at the Harvard Law School’.Footnote 63 In this way, the reader is assured that the individual whose work is being relied upon is someone whose views really can be taken seriously.

Insofar as the qualifier ‘the most highly qualified’ publicists in Article 38(1)(d) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice is concerned, this is question-begging.Footnote 64 During the drafting of the Statute of the PCIJ, members of the Advisory Committee of Jurists referred to various qualifiers, including ‘authors whose opinions have authority’, ‘qualified author’, and ‘the best qualified writers’,Footnote 65 but each raises questions of their own. Although it might be said that a particular individual is surely a most highly qualified publicist, ultimately, the moniker is subjective.Footnote 66 In practice, the work of many different publicists has been utilized and the focus tends to be more on the quality of a particular teaching than the standing of a particular author.

Ultimately, the category of publicist can be broken down into different types—State-empowered entities, expert groups, and ordinary publicists. It is important to do so as the precise influence of teachings of publicists varies depending on the particular type of publicist as well as the specific type of teaching. To teachings we now turn.

III. Teachings of the ‘ordinary’ publicist

In one of the classic quotes on the teachings of publicists, set out in the Introduction, the Supreme Court of the United States referred to the use of teachings of publicists as ‘evidence’ of the ‘customs and usages of civilized nations’.Footnote 67 The passage has since been repeated with approval on numerous occasions.Footnote 68 However, just as publicists are of different types, so too are teachings. Not all types of teachings contain evidence of the customs and usages of States and those that do not can prove just as valuable for the development of international law as those that do. Accordingly, it is important to explore the notion of ‘teachings’, a notion on which little can be discerned from the proceedings of the Advisory Committee of Jurists. Members of the Committee used the terms ‘teaching’, ‘doctrine’, ‘opinions’ and ‘works’ interchangeablyFootnote 69 but provided little by way of elucidation on their meaning. The French term ‘la doctrine’ was used, but again without explanation.Footnote 70 What follows is a non-exhaustive categorization of the notion.Footnote 71

A. Digests

International law digests are essentially collections of materials on international law that are selected, edited, arranged and subjected to analysis. Historically, digests have proven influential in the development of international law. Courts have not infrequently utilized them for their evidence of State practice and the views of States. Government legal advisors also turn to them for precedents.Footnote 72

Particularly influential digests of international law were produced in the United States, authored successively by Wharton, Moore, Hackworth, and Whiteman.Footnote 73 Digests were also produced in other States, such as Clive Parry's A British Digest of International Law (1965). The complete titles of the works are revealing. For example, the full title of Moore's Digest is: A Digest of International Law as embodied in Diplomatic Discussions, Treaties and other International Agreements, International Awards, the Decisions of Municipal Courts, and the Writings of Jurists and especially in Documents, Published and Unpublished, Issued by Presidents and Secretaries of State of the United States, the Opinions of the Attorney-General, and the Decisions of Courts, Federal and State. These works thus provide the evidence of State practice to which the US Supreme Court in the Paquete Habana was referring.

However, many of these digests were not composed purely of State practice. Rather, the practice was placed in context and accompanied by analysis. Moore's Digest, for example, traced the history of a particular issue, quoted extracts from leading documents, and elucidated the relevant principles. Moore, himself, made the point that ‘while the work bears the name and the character of a digest, it also contains much that is of an expository nature, in the form suitable to a treatise’.Footnote 74 Accordingly, some digests were, in fact, part-digest and part-treatise. As Reisman notes:

As a title, the word ‘digest’ is really a misnomer. Digests of international law do almost no ‘digesting’. Like the American casebook, they select and reproduce chunks of documents and cases relevant to particular problem areas that the decisionmaker is likely to encounter. In this sense, the digest is a useful counterweight to rule-oriented treatises. The documents and particularly the diplomatic correspondence show human beings applying policies and adapting institutional arrangements to ever-changing situations. So despite its nominal jurisprudence, the digest is much more representative of the actual process of international decisionmaking.Footnote 75

In selecting and reproducing ‘chunks of documents’, the author of the digest necessarily has to make a choice as to what to include and what to exclude: ‘[d]ocuments and incidents that could be extremely relevant to subsequent practice may be suppressed or reproduced so selectively that they give the reader quite a different impression of what transpired’.Footnote 76 The use of different documents, different excerpts, or different arrangements could paint a different picture. Accordingly, the role of the digest writer is important. Indeed, O'Connell goes so far as to say that ‘a mass of historical evidence is inarticulate until it is organised’ and that ‘it is the intellectual construction rather more than the observation and recording of what are assumed to be facts that gives method and vitality to the growth of rules’.Footnote 77

By the twenty-first century, the digest, or its equivalent, was of a rather different sort. The digest compiles the practice, statements and views of the relevant State, but with limited to no context, comment, or analysis. They are more in the nature of a compilation of key documents than a digest in the sense of that described by Moore. This is true of many compilations, including the sections on practice in the various year books of international law.Footnote 78 Context and comment tends to be lacking.

It has thus been suggested that it ‘made some sense’ to use the writings of scholars ‘as a source of international law’ ‘during the nineteenth century positivist heyday of international law, when scholars did the hard work of collecting international practices’ but that it makes ‘little sense today’ where scholarship in certain fields such as international human rights law is characterized by ‘normative rather than positive argument’.Footnote 79 However, some digests are put together by State legal advisors rather than scholars. Furthermore, since the heyday of the legal digest, monographs on specialized areas of international law have become commonplace,Footnote 80 and these often do canvass the relevant State practice. The collection and analysis of State practice thus continues in the teachings of publicists, but not in the form of the digest. Furthermore, international law scholarship has long contained descriptive as well as normative argument.Footnote 81

In any event, teachings of publicists are influential not only for their evidence of State practice. The US Supreme Court in Paquete Habana itself acknowledged another reason to turn to the writings of publicists, namely for ‘trustworthy evidence of what the law really is’.Footnote 82 Writings also ‘give shape and order to the disparate strands that make up international law’.Footnote 83 With the growth of the field and the increase in the number of judicial decisions on the subject, writings serve to order, systematize, and analyse what is taking place. And as Lauterpacht observed in 1956, ‘[w]hile the availability of other sources of information may have altered the nature of the function of “publicists” as recorders of the practice of States, their part as its qualified interpreters cannot always be disregarded’.Footnote 84

B. Treatises and Textbooks

Also influential historically were the major treatises on international law. In the nineteenth century, the treatise formed ‘the core of learning on international law’.Footnote 85 A treatise is defined by its method: ‘it begins with a definition of the subject matter, and proceeds by logical and systematic stages to cover the whole field’.Footnote 86 To recall Reisman once again:

The modern treatise is a systematic collection of rules. It is based, in its various forms, on a conception of decisionmaking as the application of rules to factual situations, which can be categorized in advance with enough precision so that the rules can be readily applied. The evidence of law is to be found in past decisions, each of which may be juridically analyzed in order to confirm and further clarify the rule in question.Footnote 87

As is well known, the founding texts of Grotius,Footnote 88 PufendorfFootnote 89 and VattelFootnote 90 have been hugely influential. Later, the major works by Bluntschli,Footnote 91 Fiore,Footnote 92 Hall,Footnote 93 Halleck,Footnote 94 Oppenheim,Footnote 95 Pradier-FodéréFootnote 96 and Wheaton,Footnote 97 among others,Footnote 98 were all heavily utilized. For example, Oppenheim's International Law has been described as ‘quoted and relied upon by governments and domestic and international tribunals, often as the final authoritative statement of international law on a particular point’,Footnote 99 and as ‘by common consent the outstanding and most frequently employed systematic treatise on the subject in the English-speaking countries’.Footnote 100

In certain jurisdictions, such as the United States, treatises have fallen into decline. In 1987, in a review essay entitled ‘The Case of the Vanishing Treatises’, Franck famously asked ‘[w]here have all the treatises gone?’.Footnote 101 Franck put this down to changes in legal theory and ‘legal nihilism’.Footnote 102 It has also been suggested that the treatise has been ‘superseded’.Footnote 103 On this view, the treatise is ‘no longer the most efficient or reliable vehicle for the compilation and dissemination of the positive law’.Footnote 104 By contrast, in other jurisdictions, such as France and the United Kingdom, treatises that cover the breadth of international law continue to be published.Footnote 105 And changes in authorship of ‘venerable texts’, such as the Précis Dalloz and the Collection Thémis of the Presses Universitaires de France, constitute ‘a major event’.Footnote 106

There is frequently overlap between the leading treatises and the favoured textbooks of the day. Although there are differences between treatises and textbooks—‘there are differences of function (a textbook addresses students) and reach (a treatise claims comprehensiveness)’Footnote 107 —there is no clear distinction between the two.Footnote 108 This is evident from a consideration of the major English language treatises and textbooks. Oppenheim wrote the first edition of the text now known by his name as ‘an elementary book for those who are beginning to study International Law. It is a book for students written by a teacher.’Footnote 109 Its title, however, indicates that it is a treatise. Over time, it has morphed into a practitioner work, with Fitzmaurice describing the eighth edition as ‘the practitioner's Bible’;Footnote 110 and Jennings and Watts, the authors of the ninth edition, indicating that they preserved Oppenheim's ‘status as a practitioner's book, rather than as an academic treatise’.Footnote 111 Other works have been written for both students and practitioners. In the first edition of Starke's Introduction, for example, the author notes that he was writing for ‘intending international officials, diplomatic recruits, and University students’.Footnote 112 Brownlie wrote his Principles of Public International Law for ‘ambitious students’,Footnote 113 but others have testified to its utility to practitioners.Footnote 114 It is considered a textbook and a treatise.Footnote 115 How it is perceived depends on the reader.Footnote 116 The second edition of Hall's Treatise on International Law is designated a treatise;Footnote 117 but Pearce Higgins, in the eighth edition, writes that the additions he has made should make it ‘of greater assistance to students’.Footnote 118 Other books have been written very much as practitioner works.Footnote 119

The influence of textbooks should not be underestimated. Judicial decisions tend to refer frequently to the leading textbooks of the day, as do government legal advisors.Footnote 120 As will be seen, the structure, substance and views set out in a textbook can influence generations of students.Footnote 121 Textbooks thus have the potential to exercise considerable influence.

C. Monographs and Edited Collections

Just as the age of the digest has passed, so, too, has the age of the treatise.Footnote 122 By the start of the twenty-first century, the most prevalent form of scholarship was the monograph, the edited collection and the journal article. Barely a day goes by without the publication of a monograph, an edited collection, a handbook, a guide, a companion, a festschrift, or a variant thereof.Footnote 123 A number of reasons explain this state of affairs, including the digital age and the relative ease of researching and writing;Footnote 124 the growth of the field; increasing specialization;Footnote 125 the increase in the number of individuals working in the area, in academia, in practice, and as students; the related increase in the number of conferences and workshops that take place; the increase in the number of publishing houses and law journals;Footnote 126 and career reasons,Footnote 127 such as the ‘publish or perish’ phenomenon.

Treatises were not designed to be read from cover to cover. They were more encyclopaedia and less monograph.Footnote 128 Their value lay in being able to dip in and out of them to access information on an as needed basis. By contrast, monographs and journal articles are designed to be read cover to cover, although, in the case of monographs, this perhaps happens more in theory than in practice.Footnote 129

A monograph enables ‘a rigorous and extensive presentation of arguments, sustained potentially over a broader set of areas, and placed in context with other important issues, both within and outside of a discipline’.Footnote 130 It will include ‘detailed discussion on trends and contradictions in jurisprudence, comprehensive accounts of research or scholarship on a given topic, and/or presentations of valuable and interesting historical or statistical data’.Footnote 131 A monograph tends to focus on one topic, or one specific area of law, and subjects that topic or area to comprehensive analysis. Monographs can serve as repositories of State practice, as ‘trustworthy evidence of what the law really is’,Footnote 132 and the source of new ideas. Much turns on the individual monograph and the goals of the particular author.

D. Commentaries

Although a subset of the previous category, there is a special place for Commentaries in the teachings of publicists. Often, a treaty provision is rather succinct and its meaning is difficult to discern. A teaching that explores the meaning of the provision looking into its object and purpose, situating it in context, considering its drafting history, analysing subsequent practice, and canvassing relevant literature—can prove influential. It is particularly in the interpretation of the law that Commentaries have proven valuable.

The ICRC Commentaries on the Geneva Conventions under the general editorship of Jean Pictet, and the ICRC Commentaries on the Additional Protocols, are a good example of this. They have been described by courts and tribunals as ‘particularly valuable’,Footnote 133 even ‘authoritative’.Footnote 134 The manner in which the ICRC Commentaries have been used is even more revealing than the terminology used to describe them. The Commentaries are cited and quoted extensively in certain judgments.Footnote 135 In other cases, the Commentaries are treated as determinative. For example, according to the Martić Trial Chamber, on one particular issue, the ICTY Appeals Chamber in Blaškić ‘based its holding on the ICRC Commentary’.Footnote 136 Likewise, in the Stakić Appeal Judgment, the Appeals Chamber noted that ICTY trial judgments on a particular issue ‘rely for their authority on a statement in the ICRC Commentary’.Footnote 137

The weight given to the ICRC Commentaries is thus considerable. This is particularly notable as the Commentaries did not in fact represent the official views of the ICRC.Footnote 138 The foreword to the 1952 Commentary on the First Geneva Convention, for example, provides that, ‘[a]lthough published by the International Committee, the Commentary is the personal work of its authors’.Footnote 139 Likewise, the Foreword to the ICRC Commentary on the Additional Protocols indicates that the ICRC viewed the Commentary ‘above all as a scholarly work, and not as a work intended to disseminate the views of the ICRC.’Footnote 140 Over time, and in practice, the Commentaries have come to be seen as reflecting the ICRC's view.

Commentaries, generally, tend to be of particular use to courts. For example, Christoph Schreuer's The ICSID Convention: A Commentary has been described as having achieved ‘a unique position’ in international investment law, being cited in more than 60 awards.Footnote 141 Likewise, Bothe, Partsch and Solf's Commentary is regularly cited by international criminal courts and tribunals, and, at times, is given the same authority as the ICRC Commentary.Footnote 142 As Thirlway notes, ‘there are a number of scholarly publications in specialized fields that have obtained the status of being the book on that particular subject, cited by counsel and by tribunals with almost the authority of one of the three sources of international law.’Footnote 143

E. Journal Articles

The journal article is the short form of the monograph. Periodicals on international law were established, among other things, in order to make international law accessible to a wider audience. The Foreword to the International Law Quarterly, the predecessor to this Quarterly, stressed the need to increase awareness of international law: ‘it is to be hoped that the foundation of this new Quarterly will bring home to a wider section of the community the part which International Law has to play in the modern world, and will lead to an ever increasing knowledge of the rules which it prescribes, so as to strengthen in the international sphere the forces that make for justice through compliance with the law’.Footnote 144

Some years earlier, in the ‘Prospectus’ for the American Society of International Law, the absence of an English language periodical devoted to international law was noted, as was the importance of a means of communication between jurists and students and the scientific and the lay public.Footnote 145 The ‘goal’ of the American Journal of International Law was to ‘attract readers among legal academics, scholars of international relations and history, government officials, members of military and diplomatic establishments (from both the United States and abroad), staffs of international institutions and nongovernmental organizations, members of the bench and bar, and businessmen and others involved in international commerce and affairs’.Footnote 146 This is reflected in the first article in the first issue of the American Journal. Entitled ‘The Need of Popular Understanding of International Law’, the author, Elihu Root, noted that ‘[t]he increase of popular control over national conduct, which marks the political development of our time, makes it constantly more important that the great body of the people in each country should have a just conception of their international rights and duties’.Footnote 147 Root went on to note that ‘[o]ne means to bring about this desirable condition is to increase the general public knowledge of international rights and duties and to promote a popular habit of reading and thinking about international affairs’.Footnote 148 Right from the outset, the American Journal saw policymakers,Footnote 149 and lay readers,Footnote 150 as a key part of its audience.

English language international law journals of the period were thus designed to convey information on international law to a wide audience. This necessarily had an impact on the form and content of the periodical. They were published at regular intervals and contained pieces of digestible length. The precise content of the periodical differed from publication to publication, but they tended to contain scholarly articles of differing lengths, recent developments, reviews of the case law, consideration of State practice, and reviews of recent publications. Nonetheless, the mixed audience meant that pieces could not always serve both the specialist and the lay reader.Footnote 151

International law journals published since that time share the same format but differ in focus. For example, the African Journal of International and Comparative Law ‘is meant to provide a forum in which African lawyers, scholars and Africanists elsewhere may freely exchange their ideas, regarding International and Comparative Law generally and as they relate to Africa in particular’.Footnote 152 The Asian Journal of International Law ‘hopes to provide a forum for debating the world of international law and institutions’ and ‘aspires to cultivate a conversation between scholars, practitioners and policy-makers located in or interested in Asia’.Footnote 153 And the Chinese Journal of International Law was established to enable the international community to access the views and materials of China, to promote mutual understanding, and ‘to inform decision-making in international law and relations and promote research and teaching in China’.Footnote 154

As is evident from the goal of each of these journals, the accessibility of a teaching is important. A variety of factors influence accessibility, including the language in which the teaching is written, whether it is available electronically, and whether it is freely available. At a practical level, teachings in one of the more widely-spoken languages, or in multiple languages, will be accessible to a larger audience than writings in a language that are spoken in only a handful of States. This has influenced the language in which particular journals are published, and the language in which authors publish their work.Footnote 155 For example, the International Review of the Red Cross switched from French to English, but publishes annual selections in Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish.Footnote 156 Journals such as the Chinese Journal of International Law are published in English even though they are based in States in which the native language is not English. Indeed, the lack of an English language journal of international law emanating from China was a reason for its creation.Footnote 157 This attracts a broader readership and makes use of the articles more likely. Accessibility of teachings is important also in the sense of their being readily locatable. If a teaching is difficult to access, it is less likely to be used. With this in mind, and fitting with its intended readership, the American Journal ‘has always received preferential distribution within the U.S. Department of State and to U.S. embassies abroad’.Footnote 158 Other journals are freely available online. The changing nature of research also affects the way in which teachings are found. Today, teachings are going to be more widely read if they are available electronically and if they are available without charge.

F. Blog Posts

A relative newcomer to the category of teachings, and arising out of the digital age, is the blog post. Blogs serve a variety of purposes, including informing readers of recent developments and subjecting those developments to critical analysis.Footnote 159 They allow authors to test out their ideas; and enable readers to be reached more quickly than the print format allows, for example providing quick reactions to a judgment or event, or conducting symposia on recently published work. If they allow comments to be made on posts, blogs also enable a relative dialogue to take place.

There has been some discussion as to whether the quality of a blog post is less than that of a published article as they tend not to undergo blind peer review.Footnote 160 One danger is that blogs ‘make possible the repeated and systematic broadcast of non-expert opinions, opinion that can then be picked up and amplified by other non-expert blogs’.Footnote 161 However, that is more a critique of particular blogs, particular authors, or particular blog posts, rather than of the medium of blogging itself.

From the perspective of influence, one of the key features of blog posts is their potential to reach a broader audience than other legal writings. As with legal periodicals when they first emerged, blogs are designed to reach specialists as well as lay readers and practitioners as well as academics.Footnote 162 Many readers, including journalists and lay readers, as well as academics and practitioners, might be willing to read a 500-word blog post rather than a 10,000-word article on the same issue. And blog posts do have influence.Footnote 163

Ultimately, there are a number of different types of teachings, including digests, treatises, textbooks, monographs, commentaries, journal articles and blog posts. Other categories, such as casebooks, and oral teachings, for example lectures and presentations, could be added.Footnote 164 Different categories of teachings serve different purposes and appeal to different audiences. The idea that teachings of publicists should only identify and analyse State practice is thus to privilege a very particular type of writing and to overlook the multiple audiences of legal writings.

IV. Assessing influence

As noted in the Introduction, in days gone by, teachings of publicists were considered particularly influential in the development of international law. By contrast, it is commonly suggested that, by the start of the twenty-first century, teachings of publicists had become far less influential. ‘Influence’, though, is a rather tricky concept to pin down. It has been suggested that assessing the influence of teachings ‘with any exactitude is almost impossible’,Footnote 165 a position which is surely correct. However, a working notion of influence can be identified such as to assist with discussion of the present topic. Influence can be said to come about ‘where something from A flows into and thereby affects B’.Footnote 166 It needs to be distinguished from related concepts, in particular that of causation. Influence occurs ‘where a person's outlook alters as a result of his or her conscious or subconscious noticing of some external stimulus’.Footnote 167

Thus, the influence of teachings of publicists cannot properly be assessed by looking at the teaching or the publicist alone. The expertise of the publicist and the quality of his or her work, while important, are only part of the picture. In order properly to assess influence, the teaching must be considered in relation to those that receive it. Teachings of publicists have little to no influence in and of themselves. Even when an idea might be said to originate with a publicist, it does not become the law through the work of the publicist alone. It is only if and when the teaching is taken up by other actors that the teaching can be said to have influence. Were the idea not taken up by a State, a court, or another actor, it would remain at the level of an idea. The publicist is part of the community of international lawyers,Footnote 168 and it is how actors within the community receive and use the writing that determines its influence. It is this interaction between publicists and other actors—which includes other publicists—that is important. The importance of the community of international lawyers thus extends beyond matters of interpretation to the making and shaping of international law more broadly.Footnote 169 And teachings must be seen as part of the interaction between actors that are involved in the making and shaping of international law.Footnote 170

Accordingly, there are two crucial elements to determining influence, in addition to the publicist and the teaching, namely the actors that receive the teaching and the interaction between the teaching and these actors. However, it is important to bear in mind that not all writings will be influential. Indeed, given the number of teachings on international law that are published each year, a relatively low percentage of teachings are likely to have proven influential.

A. Actors Being Influenced

The actors that receive the teaching are the various actors in the community of international lawyers. They thus include States, courts and tribunals, international organizations, treaty bodies, and so on. They also include other publicists, be they State-empowered entities, expert groups, or ordinary publicists. The precise composition of the community of international lawyers varies depending on the subject matter at issue. Indeed, rather than a single community of international lawyers, there are, in fact, multiple communities of international lawyers.Footnote 171 The community comprises all those who have expertise in the relevant issue. For example, insofar as a matter of international human rights law is concerned, the community would include States, regional human rights courts, UN human rights treaty bodies, special procedures, human rights non-governmental organizations, and academics.Footnote 172 Depending on the specific issue under consideration, it might also include other actors such as general public international lawyers, trade lawyers, or military lawyers.

Each of the actors in the community of international lawyers uses teachings of publicists. States utilize teachings as ‘shortcuts’ given that they often have to act under time pressure.Footnote 173 Government legal advisors turn to digests for precedents, for example,Footnote 174 relying on teachings of publicists instead of undertaking the first-hand work themselves. On one view, then, ‘international law is made by the legal advisers of Foreign Offices … depending very much on learned authors’.Footnote 175 The teachings of publicists are thus used behind the scenes. They are also used publicly. Government legal advisors and other counsellors rely on teachings of publicists to support their arguments and lines of thinking.Footnote 176 They are referred to in legal opinions,Footnote 177 and in manuals.Footnote 178 States refer to teachings in their pleadings before courts and tribunals. Teachings also influence States’ positions, for example, in negotiations with other States.

Teachings are also used by courts and tribunals, both international and domestic. This is particularly evident from the judgments of courts and tribunals, in which teachings are cited. The citation of teachings is a matter that will be discussed further below.Footnote 179

Publicists are also part of the community of international lawyers; and publicists influence other publicists. The tendency of publicists to refer extensively to the writings of other publicists in support of their arguments has been criticized.Footnote 180 Indeed, at times, it can prove self-referential and self-serving. And many teachings of publicists seem to be read only by other publicists.Footnote 181 At the same time, the potential influence of a shared view in the writings of publicists should not be underestimated. If the view of one highly regarded publicist is X, the fact that that view is shared by other highly regarded publicists can make a difference. As Chancellor Kent put it: ‘in cases where the principal jurists agree, the presumption will be very great in favour of the solidity of their maxims’.Footnote 182 The influence of a shared view amongst publicists can be seen in the ICJ's references to ‘all or nearly all writers’,Footnote 183 or ‘general opinion’,Footnote 184 as well as its reference to splits amongst publicists.Footnote 185 As with the work of expert groups, it becomes more difficult to argue that the legal position is Y if publicists generally are of the view that the position is X and have explained why this is the case. That being said, publicists are only part of the community of international lawyers. Thus, even if there is a shared view among publicists, that view needs to be considered alongside the views of other actors in the community of international lawyers, in particular, States.

The different categories of publicist should also be kept in mind when considering the influence of publicists on other publicists. The influence of one category of publicist on another, such as the influence of an individual publicist on the ILC, is important. For the ILC then develops the points made in the doctrine and uses the doctrine to shape its commentary, which can in turn influence, or even become, a later treaty provision. In this way ‘“teachings” are … further developed by “teachings”’.Footnote 186

B. Interaction between Teachings and Actors

The second key element for assessing influence is the interaction between the teaching and the relevant actor. It is this interaction that is the most difficult element to determine. Much of the interaction takes place behind closed doors, making it difficult to establish which particular teachings have been read. Even when that can be determined, for example, by establishing which teachings were included in bundles for judges as part of case files, or by tracing downloads of articles to particular servers in government, it is difficult to determine actual influence. Actors often do not explain their thought processes; and reading a teaching is not the same as being influenced by it, though in the broadest sense, we are all products of our experiences. Thus, signifiers of influence have to be identified and proxies for influence have to be used.

1. Citation

It is in this context that citation by courts and tribunals can prove useful. In many respects, citations can be viewed as proxies for influence, as a citation reveals the interaction between the judge and the writing.

Citations to teachings are commonplace in international law jurisprudence. Although the ICJ tends not to refer to ordinary publicists, on several occasions, it has referred to teachings of publicists generally.Footnote 187 Just occasionally, it does refer to individual publicists;Footnote 188 and it makes not infrequent reference to the work of the International Law Commission.Footnote 189 As is well known, the teachings of publicists are cited in separate and dissenting opinions of judges. Other international courts and tribunals make greater reference to teachings of publicists. This is particularly prominent in certain fields, such as international criminal law and international investment law, in which reference tends to be made to teachings of publicists in the judgment or arbitral award. Certain national courts also refer to the teachings of publicists, often rather frequently. For their part, parties to cases make copious references to teachings in their arguments before a court. This suggests that ‘litigants expect them to have some effect on the decision-maker's approach’.Footnote 190

Teachings of publicists are cited in different ways. They might be cited as authority for a particular view that is set forth in a judgment, relying on the position set out in the teaching to reach the relevant conclusion. This is the strongest form of influence but also the one that is the most difficult to establish. Teachings might be cited as confirmation of a conclusion reached, to support a view already held. In this form of citation, the teaching is used to buttress the conclusion and to indicate to the reader that others are of the same view. This is akin to the ‘see also’ cite in an academic publication. Indeed, in a different context, it has been suggested that ‘scholarly articles are generally utilized in a superficial manner primarily to add academic authority to decisions ultimately based upon other grounds, rather than playing a significant role in the actual decision-making process’.Footnote 191 Teachings might also serve as a pointer to the reader for additional information. This is akin to the ‘see further’ cite. The teaching is cited in this sense if the judge is of the view that the reader might find it of value. Teachings can also be referenced to act as a counterargument to the proposition set out, in order to demonstrate that all sides of the argument have been considered. This is akin to the ‘compare’ cite. It may or may not be followed with a statement as to why the teaching is incorrect. Teachings might be cited also for other reasons, for example, as a substitute for State practice;Footnote 192 as an indication of the state of legal thinking on a matter; as a summary of the state of the law, conflicting or otherwise; or as ‘a convenient locus for a well-established proposition’.Footnote 193

Each of these forms of citation suggests that the teaching has influenced the court or tribunal, albeit the influence is of different types. However, citation is not the same as influence.Footnote 194 For example, if a judge asks a law clerk to footnote an opinion, the cited material did not influence the judge in coming to his or her conclusion. Conversely, teachings can influence courts and tribunals even without their being cited. Teachings might not be cited for a number of reasons, such as legal culture or not wanting to single out a particular author. This does not mean that judges and other actors have not read the teaching or that the teaching did not influence their decision.Footnote 195 Likewise, particular teachings may be referenced for particular points, but there might not be citation to broader pieces that influenced the judge's general thinking on the matter or his or her approach to an issue.

It is difficult to determine why a particular teaching of a particular publicist was cited as opposed to a different teaching by another publicist. As discussed above, the eminence of a particular author, signified by factors such as reputation, expertise and title carries weight, as does the quality of the work.Footnote 196 There are also practical matters, such as whether the teaching was drawn to the attention of the court, for example by being cited in written pleadings or referenced in oral argument. How lawyers receive the work will thus be of particular importance and is an understated part of analyses of citations. Judicial decisions are greatly influenced by the arguments of counsel; indeed, in certain cases, a judicial decision might reflect acceptance of an argument of counsel. Accordingly, teachings will often need to influence lawyers before they will influence courts.

Citation of particular works can take on a life of their own. If a particular writing is cited on a few occasions, other courts, or the same court on different occasions, might prove more amenable to citing the work, in the knowledge that others have done so. Over time, citation of the work might become habit and it might even prove unusual not to cite the work. For example, it would be unusual not to see reference to the ILC's Articles on State Responsibility if a matter of State responsibility is at issue.

Although a proxy for influence, and thus important, citation by courts and tribunals should not be the only way in which influence is measured. It tends to be considered because it is an easier and tangible form of ascertaining influence—tracking what is said rather than probing what is unsaid. As is evident from the above, though, counting citations has its faults and is partial at best. More importantly for present purposes, judges and arbitrators are only some of the members of the community of actors that make and shape international law. Citation by States in pleadings is equally important but more frequently overlooked. Accordingly, to focus on whether and how courts cite teachings only captures part of the picture. A focus on citation by courts and tribunals also privileges a common law way of thinking.

2. Other interactions

Citation is not the only signifier of influence. Other forms of interaction, and other proxies for influence, also exist. For example, treaties have been concluded on the basis of ILC draft Articles. In addition to those mentioned above,Footnote 197 they include the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties between States and International Organizations or between International Organizations (1986), the Vienna Convention on Succession of States in respect of Treaties (1978) and the Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness (1961). The work of the ILC very clearly influenced the structure, content and language of these treaties. Likewise, the work of some expert groups has led to the conclusion of bilateral agreements that are based on the work of the expert group.Footnote 198 Although less frequent, the writings of ordinary publicists have also led to the conclusion of treaties. Lemkin's role in the development of the concept of genocide and the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide is a case in point.

Moving away from conventional law, the ICRC's Study on Customary International Humanitarian Law led to a response being written by the United States.Footnote 199 For present purposes, the fact that the response was somewhat critical of the Study is irrelevant. The publication of the Study caused a State to respond, presenting its critique of the Study and also its view on certain issues. In this way, the Study influenced the behaviour of a State. Writings of publicists have also led to the development of new norms, such as the right to development.Footnote 200 Other writings, such as the Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare, have emerged as the focal point around which discussions of the issue revolve.

3. Pervasive influence

Certain types of teachings have a pervasive influence, one that is more difficult to evidence. Textbooks, in particular, together with other writings that are used in legal education, present the best example of this broader influence. As has been written of the domestic context: ‘[c]ommon sense suggests that the most important single channel of influence of academic lawyers is through teaching future practitioners’.Footnote 201 To this could be added future academics.

The structure, substance and approach of a textbook or a casebook can influence generations of students. These materials ‘may be, at least for some law students, the only real exposure to international law methods, scholarship, and attitudes’. As such, they may be ‘strikingly influential in forming the views and attitudes of practitioners and policymakers’.Footnote 202 Along similar lines, it has been noted that in France:

[t]he two most widely used general texts (précis) are those published by Dalloz and the Presses Universitaires de France. Under the pen of two great scholars, Charles Rousseau and Paul Reuter, these texts on the general principles of public international law have provided the first (and often the only) access to the discipline for many thousands of students and practitioners of public international law in France during the last fifty years. In a sense, these two précis have constituted the accepted wisdom on the subject for French readers. Footnote 203

Whether a textbook or casebook is purely doctrinal, or includes discussion of inter alia feminist approaches to international law, third world approaches to international law, and economic analyses of international law, will likely affect students’ views on the subject. Whether a work focuses on international cases or national ones will also affect perceptions of the subject.Footnote 204 The content of an international law textbook, for example, whether it includes a chapter on space law or on international human rights law, conveys a sense of which issues form part of the core content of the subject.Footnote 205 Likewise, how the teaching approaches substantive issues, such as the existence or otherwise of jus cogens norms and the nature of ‘soft law’, can influence the reader. Textbooks and casebooks thus figure prominently in a student's thinking of the subject, particularly when they are used at an impressionable and formative stage, for example in a student's first foray into the subject.

There is also a close relationship between the ‘style of a legal system’ and the ‘manner in which its most prestigious lawyers are trained’.Footnote 206 As students move into their careers—as academics and practitioners—they take with them their views of international law that they first gleaned as students, shaped over time and with experience, and put them into practice. This can be seen, for example, in a professor adopting the same textbook that they used as a student,Footnote 207 and former students citing writings of those who taught them.Footnote 208 Textbooks can also influence other textbooks.Footnote 209 And textbooks might be translated into a different language for use by a different audience,Footnote 210 sometimes by former students.

The broad, pervasive influence of teachings is not limited to textbooks. Hernández has referred to the law-making potential of teachings, ‘not through the formal processes of law-making, but rather, through the indirect law-creative potential that is exercised through cognising, structuring and apprehending legal materials’.Footnote 211 On this view, a publicist serves as a ‘grammarian’, who ‘shapes the formulation of arguments by other actors, prescribes the categories of acts, utterances and practices that will be deemed relevant and indeed contributes to the elaboration of the language’.Footnote 212

C. Non-Linearity of Influence

The idea of influence was captured above in the sense of ‘where something from A flows into and thereby affects B’.Footnote 213 However, the relationship between writings and actors within the community of international lawyers is not always as neat or as linear as this would suggest.

The role of the publicist within the community of international lawyers is multifaceted. A publicist might set out his or her view of the law in a writing and then adopt the same position when appointed as counsel, judge, or arbitrator. For example, there is a certain similarity between Antonio Cassese's view, expressed in his academic writings, that there is crime of terrorism in customary international law and the Interlocutory Decision of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon of which he was the primary author.Footnote 214 In the investment context, an individual might be appointed an arbitrator, or not be appointed as an arbitrator, in part, because of the views he or she has previously expressed in teachings. And the position taken in the teaching might later be reflected in the arbitral award. In each of these cases, the influence of the pronouncement comes from its status as a judicial decision or an arbitral award. Nonetheless, it can be traced back to the position first expressed when the individual was a writer.

The multifaceted nature of the publicist operates also in different ways. An individual might make the very same point in two different capacities—for example, as an individual publicist and as a state-empowered entity—but it is the statement in the capacity as a state-empowered entity that tends to be taken up and preferred. For example, it is Eide's report on the right to food in his capacity as Special Rapporteur that tends to be referenced, rather than his book chapter.Footnote 215 In the case of the right to development, the idea was first set out in a writing of a publicist. However, it was the author's role in the Commission on Human Rights that enabled him to take the idea further.Footnote 216 In other instances, an employee of a State-empowered entity might first publish a writing in his or her individual capacity before the entity later adopts the writing as its official position. This allows for others to react to the writing and allows the entity to benefit from the reactions prior to making its official position known.Footnote 217

Teachings, particularly those of State-empowered entities, are also important for their internal influence and external effects. The ICRC, for example, uses its writings as reference points when it engages in discussion with, or provides training for, States. Likewise, in a number of States, UNHCR carries out refugee status determinations. When it does so, it utilizes its Handbook and other UNHCR documents.Footnote 218 For the persons concerned, the writings of UNHCR can prove determinative of an issue.

Publicists are also influential outside specific writings. They might be consulted on their views, or they might provide advice, formal or informal, to a government or another member of the community of international lawyers. There is a long history of international lawyers combining teaching and practice. This was true of many of the founding fathers, such as Gentilis, Grotius and Vattel;Footnote 219 and continues today. Others combine teaching and government service or move back and forth between the two. They serve as external advisors, in-house lawyers and experts. They act as counsel, consultants and form part of a State's delegation at diplomatic conferences. Former students not infrequently consult their teachers to seek their views on particular matters. All this tends to be on the basis of the broader reputation of the publicist and their body of work rather than on a single writing, or on the basis of personal or professional connections. The influence of the publicist in this capacity can prove particularly significant. Mention can be made, for example, of Lauterpacht's contribution to the categorization of crimes in Article 6(c) of the Charter of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg and, specifically, the inclusion of crimes against humanity.Footnote 220 The direct contribution to the development of the law comes from the other member of community rather than the publicist in their role as advisor. However, the publicist exercises a behind-the-scenes influence. The examples also demonstrate the close relationship between different members of the community of international lawyers.

The non-linearity extends to teachings themselves. Publicists are not always consistent in what they write. A publicist might change his or her mind on a matter, recanting an earlier position. Those who have taken up the initial view of the publicist might also recant their position or they might retain that view. Equally, the same publicist might publish one view as a matter of lex ferenda, in an effort to change the law, while publishing a different view as a statement of lex lata. For example, Thomas has observed that, in a note in the British Year Book of International Law, FA Mann argued for a particular understanding of fair and equitable treatment, one that was different to prior formulations of the standard.Footnote 221 By contrast, in his monograph on The Legal Aspects of Money, Mann took a view that was consistent with the previously understood position.Footnote 222 Thomas puts the difference down to ‘the fact that in his treatise Mann was attempting to state de lege lata, as opposed to de lege ferenda’.Footnote 223 Yet, Thomas notes that it is Mann's British Year Book note that was picked up, and used, in the literature and by certain investment tribunals, rather than the views that he expressed in The Legal Aspects of Money.Footnote 224

The influence of teachings is also a multi-stage process and does not stop once A has an impact on B. Teachings are particularly influential when there is a gap or uncertainty in the law, and that gap or uncertainty needs to be filled. Thus, they are used particularly frequently in newer areas of the law such as international criminal law and international investment law. Early case law in these areas tends to be full of references to writings. Over time, however, writings tend to be used less, with the early case law being cited for the relevant proposition instead of the writings from which the early cases drew. For example, in the investment context, the arbitral tribunal in Salini ‘employed a checklist of criteria’ that was ‘nearly identical to’ the features of ‘investment’ contained in Schreuer's Commentary.Footnote 225 Over time, however, it is Salini that has become the key reference point on the issue rather than Schreuer's Commentary. Thus, one arbitral tribunal has observed that ‘[t]he factors considered in Salini are widely accepted as the starting point of an ICSID tribunal's analysis of whether there is an “investment” within the meaning of Article 25(1)’ of the ICSID Convention.Footnote 226 Indeed, it has become known as ‘the Salini test’.Footnote 227 The example is particularly instructive given that Schreuer's Commentary was not in fact cited by the arbitral tribunal for the features of investment, though it was cited elsewhere in the award, reinforcing the point that lack of citation cannot be equated with lack of influence. Furthermore, the way in which the features of investment have been used, namely moving away from a ‘descriptive list … towards a set of mandatory legal requirements’, has led Schreuer to write that ‘[t]he First Edition of this Commentary cannot serve as authority for this development’.Footnote 228 A teaching can thus take on a life of its own and be used in a way that is very different from that which the author intended.

The move from the citation of a teaching to the citation of a judicial decision or arbitral award reveals the relative weight of writings as compared with judicial decisions. It also reinforces why citation counts can be misleading. Indeed, ‘[w]hen the influence of a work becomes particularly profound, citations to it may decrease’.Footnote 229 The point is not limited to judicial decisions. If the issue of exclusion zones in the law of armed conflict at sea is recalled, the writing of an individual publicist influenced the work of an expert group and the work of the expert group influenced States’ military manuals. Today, reference is made to the State military manuals and the San Remo Manual rather than the Fenrick article which inspired them. Furthermore, as time goes by, the concept alone might be referenced, without an indication of where it originated—such as the idea of ‘instant custom’.Footnote 230 Alternatively, the concept might appear alongside the name of the originator but without reference to a particular writing—such as the ‘Baxter paradox’.Footnote 231 The irony is, then, that ‘[t]he ideas of the greatest innovators are often considered not to require explicit citation because they have become embedded in our intellectual culture’.Footnote 232

D. Limitations on the Influence of Writings

The community of international lawyers is thus a necessary part of determining the influence of teachings of publicists. However, the community can deliberately or subconsciously privilege certain teachings and limit the use of others. Membership of the community of international lawyers ‘entails the internalisation of a common set of background assumptions and disciplinary rules which are accepted by other international lawyers as valid’.Footnote 233 One consequence of this is that teachings will have to speak the language of the community and accept its strictures in order to be influential. Teachings that do not speak the language, or which are considered disruptive, might be overlooked, dismissed, pigeonholed, or otherwise not valued. This is particularly true of work that challenges mainstream thinking or seeks to overturn orthodoxies.

Reactions to the presentation of a paper by Charlesworth, Chinkin and Wright, which led to their groundbreaking article, ‘Feminist Approaches to International Law’,Footnote 234 is a good example of the potentially constricting effect of the community of international lawyers. Their account of the reactions is worth quoting in full:

The reaction to our paper was mixed. Several people were enthusiastic, while many of the audience looked discomfited and embarrassed (perhaps on our behalf!). One senior figure in the Australian international law community said in the discussion following the paper that the ideas were quite unrealistic as they would mean enlarging the scope of international law and depriving our discipline of its distinctive character. Some of our colleagues advised us to get back to ‘real world’ international law for the sake of our careers. Another type of reaction was interest in the paper as an intriguing academic sideshow. Afterwards we found that we began to be asked to appear at symposia and on panels to present what were seen as controversial and contentious feminist ideas, but that the ideas were rarely taken up or engaged with. As the three of us became more closely associated with ‘feminist approaches to international law’ our colleagues were sometimes rather disconcerted if we spoke on international law issues without taking an explicitly feminist approach. It seemed that we had created a splash without waves.Footnote 235

Another example of the potentially restrictive effect of the community of international lawyers relates to the writings on third world approaches to international law (TWAIL).Footnote 236 Anghie and Chimni have observed that ‘TWAIL has … found it difficult to assert itself in an institutional setting which, when it is not generally uncomprehending of TWAIL's history and its aims, seeks to incorporate TWAIL into a familiar geography of alliances and rivalries’ and have noted further that ‘scholarship cannot be separated from the institutional resources – law schools, journals, publishers – that enable its production’.Footnote 237

Part of the reason for this is that the community of international lawyers serves as the gatekeeper and has the potential to value only those teachings that are in its mould. Accordingly, the success of a publicist's argument will be influenced by ‘his technical prowess in balancing his political agenda with the vocabulary and form acceptable to other actors who also engage with international law’.Footnote 238 This, in turn, has the potential to stymie the influence of the most dissonant thinking, to make it more difficult to overturn orthodoxies, and to stifle radically different voices and styles. Aspects of the discipline, such as peer review and the growing importance of citation counts, reinforce the constraints and also militate against radical challenges to orthodoxies.

Alternatively, the community of actors can become fragmented, with chasms created whereby teachings no longer speak to certain members of the community. Teachings then prove to be of interest and use only to subsets of the community and there might be relatively little substantive engagement between the various subsets. For example, writing in 2005, Charlesworth observed that ‘looking at the major writings in international law and theory over the past decade, it is very hard to detect any real attempt to engage with feminist theories of international law, or indeed with any outsider perspectives’.Footnote 239 And in the United States, a split has emerged between writings of publicists and the judiciary, with Chief Justice Roberts noting that law review articles are not ‘particularly helpful for practitioners or judges’.Footnote 240 In this way, writings of publicists can lose some of their influence.

V. Conclusion

The ‘teachings of publicists’ is a heterogeneous category, including teachings and publicists of different types. Insofar as publicists are concerned, it includes entities that have been empowered by States to produce teachings; expert groups, standing and ad hoc; and ordinary publicists. Teachings are also made up of different types, and include digests, treatises, textbooks, monographs, commentaries, journal articles and blog posts. All are of different types, have different goals in mind, and appeal to different audiences. Teachings of publicists should thus not be limited either to the individual publicist or to the repository of State practice.

The influence of teachings of publicists is difficult to assess. It includes, but is not limited to, an assessment of citation by courts and tribunals. Citation is one useful measure of determining influence, but citation does not necessarily mean influence and lack of citation certainly does not mean lack of influence. More importantly for present purposes, focus on citation by courts and tribunals privileges the role of these bodies in the development of international law and downplays the role of other actors, such as States, international organizations and treaty bodies. It also understates the more pervasive influence of teachings, such as on the structure of the discipline, and on students of international law, who constitute later generations of international lawyers. Instead, influence should be assessed by reference to how all the actors within the community of international lawyers use or do not use the teachings of publicists. Individual publicists do not create law by themselves. Rather, they constitute a part of the community that does create the law. Thus, it is the interaction between teachings and the members of the community of international lawyers that is determinative of influence.

When seen in this light, it is evident that teachings of publicists continue to have an important influence on the making and shaping of international law. The precise nature of the influence varies considerably. It includes the publicist as the originator of ideas, as the finessor of norms, and as the ‘grammarian’.Footnote 241 The influence also varies by publicist. The balance between the influence of teachings of State-empowered entities and ordinary publicists has changed,Footnote 242 with the former proving particularly significant. Ordinary publicists continue to play a crucial role, but their role is different to times past. Utlimately, as Wolfke put it: ‘the influence of doctrine on the formation of international law in general is certainly rather behind-the-scenes and anonymous. To disregard it would, however, be to say the least, unjustified.’Footnote 243

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153 The Editors, ‘An Asian Journal of International Law’ (2011) 1 AsianJIL 1.

154 Tieya, W and Yee, S, ‘Foreword’ (2002) 1 Chinese IL iiiGoogle Scholar.

155 Mälksoo, L, Russian Approaches to International Law (OUP 2015) 92 Google Scholar notes that, in the UN Audiovisual Library of International Law, German and Japanese international lawyers give their presentations in English, thus attracting a broader global audience. By contrast, most of the Russian international lawyers have presented in Russian, thus limiting the reach of their presentation.

157 Tieya and Yee (n 154) iii.

158 Bederman (n 146) 58. See further Kirgis (n 151) 574.

159 See eg then Editor-in-Chief of the Leiden Journal of International Law, van den Herik, L, ‘Introduction: LJIL in the Age of Cyberspace’ (2012) 25 LJIL 1, 6Google Scholar, noting that ‘law journals cannot compete with blogs as information providers’.

160 M Milanovic, ‘Some Thoughts on the Serdar Mohammed Appeals Judgment’, EJIL: Talk! Blog, 10 August 2015, available at <http://www.ejiltalk.org/some-thoughts-on-the-serdar-mohammed-appeals-judgment/>, indicating that the UK Government argued before the Court of Appeal that the Court should not refer to blog posts, as the lack of blind peer review makes posts less rigorous.

161 B Leiter, ‘Why Blogs are Bad for Legal Scholarship’, YaleLJ Forum, 19 September 2006, available at <http://www.yalelawjournal.org/forum/why-blogs-are-bad-for-legal-scholarship>. See also J d'Aspremont, ‘In Defense of the Hazardous Tool of Legal Blogging’ EJIL: Talk! Blog, 6 January 2011, available at <http://www.ejiltalk.org/in-defense-of-the-hazardous-tool-of-legal-blogging/>, who ultimately concludes that the hazards are outweighed by the virtues of blogging.

162 See eg R Goodman and S Vladeck, ‘Welcome to Just Security!’, Just Security Blog, 23 September 2013, available at <https://www.justsecurity.org/965/security/>, in which the authors note that they hope the blog will ‘become a ready resource for decision-makers, analysts, and practitioners who address difficult U.S. national security law issues, and an invaluable reference for those simply trying to stay abreast of the daily developments in this ever-moving field.’

163 For example, they are not infrequently cited by courts and tribunals. See eg Serdar Mohammed (n 14) paras 197, 208 and 241.

164 The focus on teachings in written form seems to be due to the use of the term ‘writings of publicists’ as interchangeable with ‘teachings of publicists’, as well as the difficulties in becoming aware of teachings in oral form prior to changes in technology. Historically, it would also have been more difficult to prove that the view of a publicist was X if the view had not been expressed in writing.

165 Twining, W, ‘The Role of Academics in the Legal System’ in Tushnet, M and Cane, P (eds), Oxford Handbook of Legal Studies (OUP 2005) 926 Google Scholar.

166 Duxbury, N, Jurists and Judges: An Essay on Influence (Hart Publishing 2001) 5 Google Scholar.

167 ibid 6.

168 The concept is related to, but differs from, the idea of the interpretive community, as it extends beyond matters of interpretation. On which, see Waibel, M, ‘Interpretive Communities in International Law’ in Bianchi, A, Peat, D and Windsor, M (eds), Interpretation in International Law (OUP 2015) 147 Google Scholar. Likewise, the concept is related to, but differs from, that of the epistemic community, as there is no need for a shared episteme. On which, see Bianchi, A, ‘Epistemic Communities’ in D'Aspremont, J and Singh, S (eds), Fundamental Concepts for International Law (Edward Elgar, forthcoming 2017)Google Scholar. It is perhaps most closely related to Schachter, O, ‘The Invisible College of International Lawyers’ (1977) 72 Northwestern University Law Review 217 Google Scholar; and Hernández, G, ‘The Responsibility of the International Legal Academic: Situating the Grammarian within the “Invisible College”’ in Nollkaemper, A et al. (eds), International Law as a Profession (CUP, forthcoming 2017)Google Scholar.

169 On the importance of the community of actors for questions of interpretation, see Johnstone, I, ‘Treaty Interpretation: The Authority of Interpretive Communities’ (1990) 12 MichJIntlL 371 Google Scholar; Johnstone, I, ‘The Power of Interpretive Communities’ in Barnett, M and Duvall, R (eds), Power in Global Governance (CUP 2004)Google Scholar; Waibel (n 168). See also Venzke, I, How Interpretation Makes International Law (OUP 2012)Google Scholar.

170 See, from a different perspective, d'Aspremont (n 5) 210.

171 Waibel (n 168) 152–60.

172 See also Tobin, J, ‘Seeking to Persuade: A Constructive Approach to Human Rights Treaty Interpretation’ (2010) 23 HarvHumRtsJ 1, 8–10Google Scholar.

173 Simma (n 7) 319.

174 Sohn (n 72) 399–401.

175 ibid 401. Sohn, at 399, also argues that international law is made by ‘the professors, the writers of textbooks and casebooks, and the authors of articles in leading international law journals’.

176 The point has been noted by former government legal advisors. See eg Wood (n 6) para 16; M Lachs, ‘Teachings and Teaching of International Law’ (1976-III) 151 RdC 161, 218–19.

177 See eg Memorandum Opinion on the Geographic Scope of the Convention Against Torture and Its Application in Situations of Armed Conflict, from Harold Hongju Koh, Legal Advisor, U.S. Department of State, 21 January 2013, available at <https://www.justsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/state-department-cat-memo.pdf>.

178 See eg United States Department of Defense, Law of War Manual (June 2015).

179 See section IV.B.1.

180 eg O'Connell (n 4) 35.

181 See Twining et al. (n 165) 931.

182 The Paquete Habana (n 8) 701. Kent continued, in a more questionable manner: ‘and no civilized nation that does not arrogantly set all ordinary law and justice at defiance will venture to disregard the uniform sense of the established writers on international law’.

183 The Case of the S.S. ‘Lotus’, PCIJ Ser A No 10, at 26.

184 Case of the S.S. ‘Wimbledon’, PCIJ Ser A, No 1, at 28.

185 LaGrand Case (Germany v United States of America), Provisional Measures [2001] ICJ Rep 466, 501 (referring to ‘extensive controversy in the literature’).

186 Lachs (n 176) 225. See also Stahn and De Brabandere (n 17) 4.

187 See eg PCIJ: The Case of the S.S. ‘Lotus’, PCIJ Ser A No 10, at 26; Certain German Interests in Polish Upper Silesia, PCIJ Ser A No 6, at 20. See also ICJ: Nottebohm Case (Leichtenstein v Guatemala) (Second Phase) [1955] ICJ Rep 4, 22; Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons [1996] ICJ Rep 226, 259, para 85.

188 Land, Island and Maritime Frontier Dispute (El Salvador/Honduras; Nicaragua intervening) [1992] ICJ Rep 351, 593, para 394 (referring to the successive editors of Oppenheim's International Law and to G Gidel, Le droit international public de la mer (1934)); Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v Serbia and Montenegro) [2007] ICJ Rep 43, 125 (referring to R Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (1944)).

189 See generally, Peil, M, ‘Scholarly Writings as a Source of Law: A Survey of the Use of Doctrine by the International Court of Justice’ (2012) 1 Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law 136 Google Scholar. The work of the ILC is cited heavily also by international investment tribunals. See Cole (n 141) 305.

190 Thirlway (n 143) 127.

191 Crespi, GS, ‘The Influence of Two Decades of Contract Law Scholarship on Judicial Rulings: An Empirical Analysis’ (2004) 57 SMULRev 105, 106Google Scholar.

192 Crawford (n 9) 43.

193 Kammerhofer, J, ‘Lawmaking by Scholars’ in Brolmann, C and Radi, Y (eds), Research Handbook on the Theory and Practice of International Lawmaking (Edward Elgar 2016) 305, 322Google Scholar.

194 Duxbury (n 166) 14–15.

195 Kammerhofer (n 193) 323.

196 See section II.C.

197 See section II.A.

198 See section II.B.

199 Bellinger, JB III and Haynes, WJ II, ‘A US Government Response to the International Committee of the Red Cross Study Customary International Humanitarian Law ’ (2007) 89 IRRC 443 Google Scholar.

200 See section II.C.

201 Twining (n 165) 927. See also, on the international level, Lachs (n 176) 214.

202 DJ Bederman, ‘Review Essay, International Law Casebooks: Tradition, Revision, and Pedagogy’ (2004) 98 AJIL 200, 200.

203 de Mestral (n 105) 553 (emphasis added).

204 Bederman (n 202) 206. See further AE Roberts, Is International Law International? (OUP forthcoming 2017).

205 See Roberts, ibid.

206 Duxbury (n 166) 104, referring to Max Weber, Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology, II, 784–808.

207 See Roberts (n 204).

208 Duxbury (n 166) 20–1.

209 It has been noted that the ‘organization’ of Gengsheng, Zhou, Guoji Fa (International Law) (Shangwu Yinshuguan 1981)Google Scholar ‘is primarily based on Oppenheim's treatise on international law, edited by H Lauterpacht’. See Gross, L and Chiu, H, Book Review (1983) 77 AJIL 977, 978Google Scholar.

210 See, for example, Mälksoo (n 155) 60–1, noting that there was ‘a tradition of translating prominent West European works on international law … until the late nineteenth century’.

211 Hernández (n 168).

212 ibid.

213 Duxbury (n 166) 5.

214 Compare, for example, Cassese, A, ‘Terrorism as an International Crime’ in Bianchi, A (ed), Enforcing International Law Norms Against Terrorism (2004)Google Scholar with Interlocutory Decision on the Applicable Law: Terrorism, Conspiracy, Homicide, Perpetration, Cumulative Charging, Case No STL-11-01/I, 16 February 2011.

215 See section II.C.

216 See Donnelly (n 54) 474.

217 See the comment of S Ratner, to the blog post by M Milanovic, ‘The ICRC's Functional Approach to Occupation’ EJIL: Talk!, 18 November 2015, available at <http://www.ejiltalk.org/the-icrcs-position-on-a-functional-approach-to-occupation/>.

218 UNHCR, Procedural Standards for Refugee Status Determination under UNHCR's Mandate (2005) 1–4 and Annex 1-1; M Alexander, ‘Refugee Status Determination Conducted by UNHCR’ (1999) 11 IJRL 251, 254.

219 See Lachs (n 176) 218.

220 See Vrdoljak, AF, ‘Human Rights and Genocide: The Work of Lauterpacht and Lemkin in Modern International Law’ (2009) 20 EJIL 1163, 1189Google Scholar.

221 Thomas, JC, ‘Reflections on Article 1105 of NAFTA: History, State Practice and the Influence of Commentators’ (2002) 17 ICSID Review 21, 51–2Google Scholar, referring to Mann, FA, ‘British Treaties for the Promotion and Protection of Investments’ (1981) LII BYBIL 241, 243Google Scholar.

222 Thomas (n 221) 58, referring to Mann, FA, The Legal Aspects of Money (4th edn, 1982) 510 Google Scholar, expressing the same position as the third edition of the work, 1971, at 532.

223 Thomas (n 221) 58.

224 ibid 59.

225 Mortensen, J, ‘The Meaning of “Investment”: ICSID's Travaux and the Domain of International Investment Law’ (2010) 51 HarvIntlLJ 257, 272Google Scholar. Compare Salini Costruttori S.P.A. and Italstrade S.P.A. v Kingdom of Morocco, Case No ARB/004, Decision on Jurisdiction, para 52 ((2003) 42 ILM 609), with CH Schreuer, The ICSID Convention: A Commentary (CUP 2001) 140.

226 Malaysian Historical Salvors Sdn, Bhd v The Government of Malaysia, ICSID Case No ARB/05/10, Award on Jurisdiction, para 74.

227 See eg Mr Saba Fakes v Republic of Turkey, ICSID Case No ARB/07/20, Award, para 103.

228 Schreuer, CH et al. , The ICSID Convention: A Commentary (CUP, 2nd edn, 2009) 133 Google Scholar.

229 Duxbury (n 166) 15.

230 Attributed to Bin Cheng: Cheng, B, ‘United Nations Resolutions on Outer Space: “Instant” International Customary Law?’ (1965) 5 IJIL 23 Google Scholar.

231 Originating out of the idea that ‘as the number of parties to a treaty increases, it becomes more difficult to demonstrate what is the state of customary international law dehors the treaty’. Baxter, RR, ‘Treaties and Custom’ (1970) 129 Recueil des Cours 27, 64Google Scholar.

232 Duxbury (n 166) 15.

233 Hernández (n 168) 6. See further d'Aspremont, J, ‘Wording in International Law’ (2012) 25 LJIL 575, 586–7Google Scholar.

234 Charlesworth, H, Chinkin, C and Wright, S, ‘Feminist Approaches to International Law’ (1991) 85 AJIL 613 Google Scholar.

235 Chinkin, C, Wright, S and Charlesworth, H, ‘Feminist Approaches to International Law: Reflections from Another Century’ in Buss, D and Manji, A (eds), International Law: Modern Feminist Approaches (Hart Publishing 2005) 17, 17–18Google Scholar. See also Charlesworth, H, ‘Alienating Oscar? Feminist Analysis of International Law’ in Dallmeyer, DG (ed), Reconceiving Reality: Women and International Law (ASIL 1993) 1 Google Scholar.

236 Postcolonial or Third World Approaches to International Law did not feature in the leading AJIL symposium on method in international law, an omission that was put down to an ‘error of ignorance rather than deliberate exclusion’. See Richardson, HJ III, ‘Correspondence’ (2000) 94 AJIL 99 Google Scholar and the reply thereto, at 101. See further Anghie, A and Chimni, BS, ‘Third World Approaches to International Law and Individual Responsibility in Internal Conflicts’ (2003) 2 ChineseJIL 77 Google Scholar.

237 Anghie and Chimni, ibid, 87.

238 Hernández (n 168) 27.

239 Charlesworth, H, ‘Feminist Ambivalence about International Law’ (2005) 11 International Legal Theory 1, 2Google Scholar.

240 Cited in Schwartz, DL and Petherbridge, L, ‘The Use of Legal Scholarship by the Federal Court of Appeals: An Empirical Study’ (2011) 96 CornellLRev 1345, 1347Google Scholar. See also Edwards, HT, ‘The Growing Disjunction between Legal Education and the Legal Profession’ (1992–93) 91 MichLRev 34 Google Scholar.

241 Hernández (n 168).

242 Stahn and De Brabandere (n 17) 4.

243 Wolfke (n 3) 76.