Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-2lccl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-29T20:38:02.832Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The social field of international adjudication: Structures and practices of a conflictive professional universe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2023

Tommaso Soave*
Affiliation:
Central European University, Quellenstraβe 51, 1100 Vienna, Austria
*
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The modern professional world of international adjudication bears little trace of the ‘invisible college’ theorized by Oscar Schachter 50 years go. Instead, it has become a social field marked by a fierce competition among actors possessing unequal skills and influence. Moving from these premises, this article unravels the socio-professional dynamics of the community of legal experts – judges, arbitrators, government agents, private counsel, court bureaucrats, specialized academics, etc. – dealing with the judicial settlement of international disputes on a daily basis. On the one hand, the community has developed a specific set of social structures, practices, and dispositions that distinguish it from the rest of the international legal profession and insulate its activities from outside interference. On the other, it is the site of an endless struggle among its participants, who deploy various forms of capital to consolidate their positions relative to one another. Having outlined the twofold structure of the community – externally autonomous and internally conflictive – the article reflects on how co-operation and competition affect the everyday unfolding of international judicial proceedings and the production of legal outcomes at the international level.

Type
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law in association with the Grotius Centre for International Law, Leiden University

1. Introduction

‘International law is a group of people pursuing projects in a common professional language.’ Footnote 1 With these simple words, David Kennedy invited an analytical turn away from the traditional objects of international law – rules, procedures, institutions – and towards the actors who make up the international legal profession. Of course, Professor Kennedy is not alone. In recent decades, numerous scholars have built on similar ideas to map social structures and interactions and connect them to the production of legal outcomes in the international world.Footnote 2 Thanks to their work, we have come to appreciate the expansion, diversification, and autonomization of the discipline over the years.Footnote 3 We have grown more aware of the ethos, idiosyncrasies, sensibilities, vernaculars, and modes of sense-making of international lawyers. And we have begun to trace how legal expertise ‘flows through the capillaries’ of international life.Footnote 4

Yet, our mental maps remain incomplete and obscure as much as they reveal. Many studies of the international legal profession tend to lump it together as an ‘immense’Footnote 5 class of actors who, despite their different roles and affiliations, ultimately share the same ‘methods, style, and aesthetics’, Footnote 6 fulfil a ‘similar function’, and work together towards the emergence of ‘common fundamental values’ at the global level.Footnote 7 The image of an ‘invisible college’, co-operating across borders and serving as the ‘conscience juridique’ of humankind, Footnote 8 still holds sway in the discipline and forms part of its modern mythologies. These narratives are not epistemically neutral. Any attempt at ‘representing’ and ‘imagining’ international law as a profession inevitably ends up ‘distorting’ it.Footnote 9 For one thing, the various social segments that comprise the profession are seldom considered on their own merits and in light of their specific structures and practices. For another, the emphasis on the co-operation of international lawyers obfuscates the struggles and the confrontations that agitate the profession and shape its inner workings.

In this article, I begin to sketch an alternative map of the professional universe of international lawyers – one that brings its conflictive social dimensions into sharper relief. To do so, I focus on one particular segment of that universe, which I call the international judicial community. This, in a nutshell, is the exclusive club of legal experts – judges, arbitrators, government agents, private counsel, court bureaucrats, specialized academics, etc. – who deal with the judicial settlement of international disputes and run international courts and tribunals in their routine operations. The club has seen a rise in prominence since the 1990s, and can be credited for the circa 40,000 rulings issued by international judicial institutions to date. Footnote 10

In the pages that follow, I unravel the socio-professional dynamics of the international judicial community and reflect on how they affect the everyday unfolding of adjudication. My analysis borrows from field sociology, epitomized by the writings of Pierre Bourdieu,Footnote 11 and from more recent developments in international practice theory, including the contributions of Emanuel Adler and Vincent Pouliot.Footnote 12 As I explain in Section 2, these works offer an analytical toolbox that helps shed light on the sites of struggle within the community, the positions of its participants, their relations vis-à-vis other social fields, and the linkages between social interaction and the production of legal outcomes.

On the one hand, as I discuss in Section 3, the international judicial community has gradually developed a distinctive set of structures, practices, and dispositions that differentiate it from the rest of the international legal world. Its members are uniquely placed to influence judicial activity, and zealously protect their position from outside interference. Indeed, much of the output of international courts and tribunals can be explained by the internal properties of this ‘increasingly autonomous space’Footnote 13 which is ‘relatively independent of external determinations and pressures’. Footnote 14

On the other hand, as I argue in Section 4, the community is the site of a ruthless contest among its participants. Adjudicators, bureaucrats, counsel, and academics all deploy various forms of capital to promote their visions of the law while, at the same time, striving to assert their dominance relative to one another. Competition does not occur solely within, but also across international courts, leading to the emergence of sub-communities that defend their provinces from unwarranted trespasses.

In turn, the two-fold structure of the community – externally cohesive and internally conflictive – constitutes the ground for both the ‘continuities’ and the ‘construction of new practices’ leading to the formation of international judgments.Footnote 15 The collective expectations and the patterned repetition that emerge from the distribution of capital across the community ensure consistency in the interpretation norms, thus making international jurisprudence consistent and predictable. At the same time, the endless confrontations among community members open the door to the contestation, renegotiation, and restructuring of established patterns, thus creating avenues for the gradual evolution of legal systems. Hence, as I conclude in Section 5, the intersection between the social structures of the community and its everyday judicial practices is a key driver of both stability and change in international law.

By their nature, the dynamics I seek to describe here cannot be addressed by simply looking at the official papers (judgments, memorials, etc.), but require a deeper dive into empirically grounded socio-legal research. The information collected for this article comes from three main sets of sources, to which I refer whenever relevant to the analysis.

First, being myself a member of the international judicial community, I had the opportunity to conduct six years of ethnographic fieldwork at a multilateral judicial institution, namely the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization (WTO). There, I familiarized myself with the myriad activities that punctuate the preparation, filing, litigation, deliberation, and resolution of international cases. This extensive participant-observation enabled me to discern the structures, logics, and presuppositions of the sub-community of WTO judicial professionals and understand how their internal interactions are socially and culturally organized.

Second, as part of a larger research project,Footnote 16 I interviewed four lawyers affiliated with the registry of the International Court of Justice (ICJ);Footnote 17 three employed at the registry of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR); two serving at the secretariat of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR); three assisting investment arbitrators as tribunal secretaries; and five acting as counsel in state-to-state and investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) proceedings. These interviews allowed me to compare the inner workings of the WTO with those of other international courts and tribunals, and revealed striking commonalities in terms of patterns of practice, perceptions of competence, and standards of legal argument.

Third, I rely on the accounts of sitting and retired judges, Footnote 18 litigators, Footnote 19 and court officials, Footnote 20 who frequently disclose details about their day-to-day business through public speeches and on the pages of law reviews. Because of their selective and often self-congratulatory character, those accounts must be read ‘against the grain’Footnote 21 and triangulated with other data. Yet, they can offer precious insights into the authors’ self-perceptions as agents in society and the tacit rules of their game. Indeed, a good portion of this article is based on publicly available sources.

Admittedly, the material I gathered through ethnographic fieldwork, interviews, and desk research falls short of conclusive evidence – especially as far as quantitative empirics are concerned. More work will be needed to map the ‘gigantic maze of practices and arrangements’ that make up the international judicial field.Footnote 22 Likewise, I am aware that other authors have applied Bourdieusian concepts to international courts and tribunals.Footnote 23 While masterful, their studies tend to focus narrowly on specific institutions, without placing their findings under a wider and cross-institutional framework. My own analysis, by contrast, opts for an intermediate ‘level of abstraction’,Footnote 24 at once more specific than the whole international legal profession and more general than single organizations considered in isolation.

2. From college to field: International adjudication as a site of struggle

Much has changed since Oscar Schachter coined the famous metaphor of an ‘invisible college of international lawyers’. As originally formulated in the 1970s, the notion referred to an élite of academics hailing from the most prestigious law schools of Europe and the Americas, as well as a handful of statesmen who maintained ‘contact with the scholarly side of the profession’. Footnote 25 According to Schachter, the college was devoted to the ‘common intellectual enterprise’ of promoting international law as a unified discipline across state borders. Footnote 26 Its members often pursued both national and international careers, thus valorizing their knowledge ‘in more places’ and deploying ‘double (or even triple) strategies’ from their multiple social positions.Footnote 27

Some 50 years later, this idyllic image is thoroughly outdated. The college, if it ever existed, has given way to a full-blown profession that attracts ever-growing numbers of individuals and institutions. International regulation has exploded in scope and reach. What once was ‘a thin net of rules’ has evolved into a multi-layered set of norms covering most aspects of political, economic, and social life. Today, we find international ‘law and regulation and rule at every turn’. Footnote 28 The thickening of the system’s ‘normative density’ has resulted in a proportional increase in the ‘institutional density necessary to sustain the norms’. Footnote 29 International organizations have proliferated; state governments have established departments tasked with handling international legal affairs; and a wide array of new actors – politicians, civil servants, military commanders, multinational corporations, advocacy networks, and journalists – have become conversant in the vernacular of the discipline. Footnote 30

The broadening of the profession has coincided with its diversification and specialization. Unlike the members of the invisible college, who were raised in domestic legal traditions and turned to the field of international law late in their careers,Footnote 31 modern-day professionals are often ‘purebred’ international lawyers who acquire their ‘credentials’ and earnings mainly through activities in a cosmopolitan, delocalized socio-professional space.Footnote 32 Over time, their palimpsest of expert knowledges has grown more structured, technical, and differentiated, on par with that of domestic law specialists. Hence, if yesteryear’s international law was ‘a tradition and a political project’, Footnote 33 today’s international law is also a business and a set of career paths.

But while international legal actors are now aplenty, only a few are involved in the judicial settlement of international disputes. In fact, adjudication traditionally accounted for a minuscule portion of international legal practice. For the best part of the twentieth century, the Permanent Court of International Justice and its successor, the ICJ, remained the only state-to-state courts, each issuing no more than a couple of decisions per year. The professionals orbiting around those institutions were few and far between. To this day, ‘only a tiny percentage’ of international disputes end up before a judge. The vast majority ‘are still resolved the old-fashioned way: through diplomacy behind closed doors if we are lucky, through more confrontational and even violent forms when we are not’. Footnote 34

Yet, the proliferation of international courts and tribunals in the aftermath of the Cold War did cause a gradual shift in focus across the discipline. That was the moment when international law entered its ‘post-ontological era’, Footnote 35 that is when its existence, effectiveness, and ‘lawness’ ceased to be questioned. At last, the system had teeth. Finally, international lawyers could focus on ‘real law’, real cases, and real judges. Footnote 36 The ‘new terrain’ Footnote 37 of international adjudication saw the multiplication of treatises systematizing the case law of the various courts, evaluating the quality and rigour of their reasoning, and dissecting a variety of jurisdictional and procedural matters. Footnote 38 Judicial interpretation suddenly became the obsession of the discipline, playing out as ‘the functional equivalent of truth’ in international legal discourse. Footnote 39

Amid these developments, a group of international lawyers sought to differentiate themselves from their peers and specialize in the various aspects of international litigation. Relying on international law as background knowledge, they mastered the procedures of the different courts and tribunals and honed their skills in the art of judicial persuasion. Contrary to a purely functionalist view, these experts were not passive ‘operators’ of the emergent system, but active ‘entrepreneurs’Footnote 40 who reached out to public officials and private entities that may be interested in resorting to adjudication or arbitration to settle their differences. If many sovereign states have gradually overcome their traditional reluctance towards international courts, it is not only because of their purported commitment to the rule of law, Footnote 41 but also because of their increased exposure to an increasingly global legal service market.Footnote 42 Lawyers ‘created’ clients as often as clients ‘created’ lawyers. Footnote 43

Since its debut, this international judicial community has risen to prominence and prestige within the profession. Fifty years ago, if you had asked a young international lawyer about their ambitions, they would probably have pointed to the United Nations Office of Legal Affairs or the International Law Commission; today, they are as likely to indicate the ICJ, the ECtHR, or the WTO dispute settlement system as ideal duty stations.Footnote 44 Back then, private practitioners would lament a lack of business opportunities in international dispute settlement; today, they can comfortably list the many law firms that have set up dedicated offices in the strategic hubs of the system.Footnote 45 Universities would treat international judicial practice and procedure as an appendix to their curricula; today, they offer a wealth of specialized courses on the topic. Researchers would typically write about substantive rules and principles of international law, often acknowledging their aspirational character; today, they turn their attention to ‘what courts have actually decided’. Footnote 46

As a result, nowadays many commentators place adjudication ‘at the centre of the world of the professional international lawyer’ Footnote 47 and, by extension, consider the international judicial community as the innermost circle of that world – that which inhabits the immediate vicinity of the centre.Footnote 48 Whether real or imagined, the perceived ‘centrality’ of courts and tribunals has made them the object of keen academic scrutiny, sometimes bordering on the obsessive.Footnote 49

Indeed, in recent years, numerous authors have deployed various socio-legal concepts to delineate the community and understand the features that unite its participants. For instance, some resort to the notion of ‘epistemic community’, first described by Peter Haas as ‘a network of professionals with recognized expertise and competence in a particular domain and an authoritative claim to policy-relevant knowledge within that domain’. Footnote 50 These studies focus, inter alia, on how the collective values, worldviews, and argumentative techniques of the community contribute to international judicial discourse.Footnote 51 Others borrow from Stanley Fish’s work on ‘interpretive communities’Footnote 52 to explore the communicative interactions underlying the interpretation of international rules.Footnote 53 Moving from the premise that the meaning of words resides in their use in language, Footnote 54 these works show that the persuasiveness of legal interpretation does not stem from the inherent properties of the text to be interpreted, but from the categories of understanding, the ways of organizing experience, and the stipulations of (ir)relevance shared by the community tasked with interpreting that text. Footnote 55 Thus conceived, interpretation becomes ‘an act of authority dependent on its ability to induce acceptance by way of argument or persuasion’. Footnote 56

For all its lucidity and insight, this literature leaves several questions unaddressed. The emphasis on the ‘normative and principled beliefs’ and the ‘common policy enterprise’Footnote 57 pursued by the community tends to overplay the degree of its cohesiveness and make its participants ‘seem more similar to each other than they really are’.Footnote 58 Moreover, the socially constructed nature of interpretive and argumentative postures is often analysed in isolation from the individual agents who adopt those postures, their competing positions within the community, the structures in which they operate, and the conflicts that pit them against one another. In other words, the ideational features of the community are frequently divorced from the ‘differences and contradictions’Footnote 59 that characterize its ‘social and material activity’. Footnote 60

In the remainder of this article, I seek to fill these gaps by reappraising the international judicial community as a space of socio-professional struggle and reflecting on how its conflictive dynamics affect the practices of international courts and tribunals.

Rather than a cohesive entity, I view the community as a juridical field, famously defined by Bourdieu as ‘the site of a competition for monopoly of the right to determine the law’.Footnote 61 That competition occurs ‘among actors possessing a technical competence which is inevitably social’, and which consists in the ‘socially recognized capacity to interpret a corpus of texts sanctifying a correct or legitimized vision of the social world’.Footnote 62 Simply put, to apply a Bourdieusian lens to the community is to explore the material and symbolic conditions under which its members strive to ‘advance their interests’ both within their social field and in relation to other, competing fields.Footnote 63

A brief overview of the core concepts of field theory can help elucidate the task. First, the object of the contest among community members – the ‘economy’ of the juridical fieldFootnote 64 – is to appropriate the symbolic power necessary to impose one’s conception of the law as the dominant paradigm across the community. Symbolic power, in Bourdieu’s words, is the power to transform the world ‘by transforming the words for naming it, by producing new categories of perception and judgment, and by dictating a new vision of social divisions and distributions’. Footnote 65 The views that emerge victorious from this symbolic struggle gain the force of ‘universality and neutrality’,Footnote 66 thereby creating ‘not only the field’s logic and taken for granted limits (doxa) but also its consecration mechanisms’.Footnote 67 In other words, once established, the prevailing paradigm obscures ‘the various battles and processes’ that led to its emergence and naturalizes the social dominance of those who espouse it.Footnote 68

Second, the actors taking part in the contest possess, accumulate, and deploy various ‘species of power’, or ‘capital’,Footnote 69 which can be converted into one another under certain conditionsFootnote 70 and whose relative value is varies across time and fields. Economic capital, for instance, refers to the set of material assets that are ‘immediately and directly convertible into money and may be institutionalized in the form of property rights’.Footnote 71 Cultural capital designates the ‘instruments for the appropriation of symbolic wealth socially designated as worthy of being sought and possessed’.Footnote 72 It can be ‘institutionalized in the form of educational qualifications’,Footnote 73 but also projected informally through perceptions of competence, knowledge, taste, manners, and the like. Finally, social capital is ‘the aggregate of the actual or potential resources’ linked to ‘institutionalised relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition’. Footnote 74 This, essentially, is the kind of capital that derives from recognition within a group and possession of the credentials that allow participation in its activities.

The amount and composition of each actor’s capital determines her ‘relative force in the game’ and ‘the moves she makes’.Footnote 75 It follows that the field can be understood as ‘a network, or a configuration, of objective relations between positions’.Footnote 76 Those positions can never be reduced to technical arguments or abstract opinions. Instead, they are objectively and historically defined, in their existence and in the determinations they impose upon the agents, by their ‘present and potential situation’ in the ‘structure of the distribution of … capital’, whose possession ‘commands access to the specific profits that are at stake in the field, as well as by their objective relation to other positions (domination, subordination, homology, etc.)’.Footnote 77

Crucially, these notions enable an analysis of the international judicial community both in its external relations with competing social fields and in the internal structures that govern the interactions among its members.

Externally, fields are not ‘contained or closed entities’ with fixed boundaries, but rather ‘spaces of practices that remain in competition with other fields’. Footnote 78 Indeed, the membrane that separates the outside and the inside of the community is rather porous. Many of its participants cross it back and forth during the course of their careers, and maintain some ‘interrelationship with social forces other than those immediately at stake only in the microcosm of law’. Footnote 79 At the same time, the community is grounded on ‘a logic and a necessity that are specific and irreducible to those that regulate other fields’.Footnote 80 Its members share a ‘collective interest’ in policing the borders of the community against external interference and ‘in publicly presenting a more fixed and coherent profession of law’ Footnote 81 than that which emerges from their inner confrontations.

Internally, the struggles of the community are simultaneously geared towards the perpetuation of existing arrangements and towards ‘questioning and redefining social hierarchies and power’.Footnote 82 On the one hand, socialization and repeated interaction generate a system of ‘durable, transposable dispositions’, called ‘habitus’,Footnote 83 which is internalized by each agent in the field and guides their behaviour both consciously and unconsciously. Habitus produces recursive practices, rituals, and representations which are ‘always tending to reproduce the objective structures of which they are the product’.Footnote 84 On the other hand, the ever-shifting distribution of capital that results from the competition among community members means that its habitus and social structures remain open to contestation, renegotiation, and restructuring.

The interplay between stability and change in community dynamics has a profound impact on the routine practices of international adjudication. The notion of practice has itself become the object of a renewed scholarly interest. In recent years, several theorists have developed on Bourdieu’s works to appraise social practices as ‘an actual, contingent, evolving and productive set of activities’. Footnote 85 Those activities are informed by ‘symbolic structures of knowledge’ that ‘enable and constrain the agents to interpret the world according to certain forms, and to behave in corresponding ways’. Footnote 86 In turn, the structures are not dictated only by official discourse or peremptory commands, but rather encompass ‘the explicit and the tacit’; ‘what is said and what is left unsaid’; ‘what is represented and what is assumed’; the ‘language, tools, documents … regulations, and contracts’ that instantiate the shared dispositions of a social group. Footnote 87

Applying these insights to the domain of international governance, Emanuel Adler and Vincent Pouliot have defined international practices as ‘competent performances’. Footnote 88 More precisely, practices are ‘socially meaningful patterns of action which, in being performed more or less competently, simultaneously embody, act out, and possibly reify background knowledge and discourse in and on the material world’. Footnote 89 The definition has known some success in international legal scholarship, Footnote 90 including in the works of authors seeking to understand the operations of international courts and tribunals. Footnote 91 These studies interrogate the ways in which practices ‘connect structure to agency and back’, as well as ‘the dynamic material and ideational processes that enable structures to be stable or to evolve, and agents to reproduce or transform structures’. Footnote 92

Taken together, field theory and practice theory form the analytical framework that guides my exploration of the socio-professional dynamics of the international judicial community. In the sections that follow, I apply this framework to map the myriad instances of co-operation and competition among community members in their day-to-day business. The analysis proceeds in three movements. I begin by delineating the external boundaries of the community and identifying the exclusionary mechanisms that enable it to sustain its structural distinction and relative autonomy from the rest of the international legal world. Next, I turn to the internal conflicts that roil the community and examine how its members strive to maximize their capital and consolidate their positions relative to one another. Having shown that the community is simultaneously ‘a relatively autonomous structure and an unsettled mélange of different outlooks and ideas’,Footnote 93 I conclude by discussing the impact of its everyday practices on the conduct of judicial proceedings and the production of legal outcomes.

3. Policing the borders: Co-operation, autonomization, and operational closure

The first challenge that arises in attempting to describe the international judicial community is to draw its boundaries. Who are its members? And what differentiates them from the broader professional universe of international lawyers? Answering these questions is no easy task, because social fields come ‘in various shapes and sizes’, can be ‘tightly organized’ or ‘diffuse’, Footnote 94 and often intersect with other fields. Moreover, my own descriptive perspective is, by all purposes, a chosen perspective that represents, and thus inevitably modifies, the object of my inquiry. Footnote 95 To write about the community is, partly, to constitute it.

That being said, I believe that what sets the community apart from the rest of the international legal profession is the degree of proximity to the routine functioning of international courts and tribunals – which, as I will explain, roughly corresponds to the degree of influence on judicial outcomes. This distinction, however blurry, helps separate an ‘outer’ and an ‘inner’ circle of international adjudication professionals.

In the former camp, we find the wide variety of actors having direct or indirect stakes in international adjudication. Government representatives spend years defining the institutional design of each new court, debating its powers and jurisdiction, and eventually ratifying its founding treaty. Later, they periodically negotiate the appointment or renewal of judges and set the agenda for institutional reform. Meanwhile, national politicians praise or blame judicial decisions to advance domestic or foreign policy agendas; non-governmental organizations submit amici curiae or sponsor complaints in pursuit of advocacy strategies; multinational corporations take jurisprudence into account when setting out trade or investment plans; journalists cover the most significant rulings and disseminate them to the general public; etc. These forms of engagement ensure the continued goodwill of external stakeholders towards international adjudication Footnote 96 and make them the ultimate arbiters of the system.

In practice, however, these stakeholders have a relatively limited say on the day-to-day unfolding of the international judicial process. The pressure they exert on courts and tribunals occurs either before the start of proceedings – through institutional design and the appointment of judges – or after their completion – through the appraisal and the (non-)implementation of judgments. What happens in between is usually of little concern to them: after all, the rules that govern international proceedings aim to shield the content of decisions from overt political interference. If anything, external stakeholders serve as the mediate audience of international adjudicators: a looming presence that observes the unfolding of dispute settlement from a certain distance and intervenes only when the circumstances so require. Footnote 97

In the inner circle, by contrast, we find the actors who operate within and in the immediate surroundings of international courts and tribunals. These legal professionals are in charge of running the judicial machinery in its routine operations, and their recursive practices shape and inform every stage of the proceedings. Obviously, international judges and arbitrators fit the bill: they are the most recognizable actors in the community, officially vested with the symbolic power to interpret and apply the relevant norms to the cases at hand. Other repeat players include state agents, who head the delegations appearing before the court, and the counsel who represent the parties and submit arguments on their behalf. In addition, the community includes a panoply of actors whose roles are less apparent. For instance, each court or tribunal provides its adjudicators with a set of legal bureaucrats – called clerks, registry or secretariat officials, or arbitral secretaries depending on the institution concerned – who assist in the preparation, deliberation, and drafting of judgments. Likewise, outside of courts, specialized scholars appraise and systematize judicial decisions, identify patterns and inconsistencies in case law, and suggest solutions going forward.

Ostensibly, these various actors occupy distinct positions. However, the boundaries between their roles are blurrier than they first appear. Throughout their careers, community members swap roles frequently – and sometimes even don multiple hats at once. Footnote 98 Prominent academics may take a break from their faculty chairs to serve on an international court; Footnote 99 arbitrators in an ISDS case may appear as counsel in another;Footnote 100 the legal officers working for a registry or secretariat may later be recruited by government departments or private law firms;Footnote 101 universities routinely organize conferences bringing together practitioners and academics; and so forth. All combinations are possible. This revolving door among the bench, the bureaucracy, the bar, and the academe helps strengthen bonds and forge ties.Footnote 102 Indeed, while external stakeholders are diffuse and scattered across the globe, the international judicial community is a tight network of habitués who walk the corridors of international courts on a regular basis, hold first-name personal contacts, and boast friendly professional relationships. Footnote 103

Overall, community members are driven by different interests from external stakeholders. The latter play the game of adjudication in pursuit of goals other than the game itself – be they a country’s perceived national interest, a multinational company’s trade or investment opportunities, an individual’s fundamental freedoms, etc. The former, conversely, derive their capital from the very functioning of the adjudicative mechanism. Footnote 104 For them, the complexities of dispute settlement are not the means to an ulterior result – but an end in itself, and the specific focus of their expertise.Footnote 105 It follows that community members share a self-interest in defending international judicial institutions as such, extending the reach and pervasiveness of their powers, and constantly reasserting their ‘courtness’. Footnote 106

As its influence grew, the international judicial community sought to erect barriers to insulate its inner social workings from external competition and secure its control over the everyday functioning of international courts and tribunals. Nowadays, the ‘modes of education and reproduction, paths to access, and definitions of competences’Footnote 107 of the community are increasingly regimented and serve as powerful mechanisms of social exclusion. Indeed, in their routine unfolding, judicial proceedings take place ‘at a considerable remove’ from political and diplomatic institutions Footnote 108 and are characterized by an increasing sense of clubbiness and familiarity among participants.Footnote 109

For instance, almost every international court or tribunal is surrounded by a specialized bar of counsel, whose members master the particular subject matter and the judicial style of the institution at hand. Footnote 110 These bars are not formally recognized institutions, as there exist no official qualifications or requirements for someone to represent a party before an international judicial body. Footnote 111 Instead, access to the bar is conditioned on reputation, recursive legal practice, strenuous training, and often the mentorship of an incumbent member.Footnote 112 Accordingly, capital in international litigation is concentrated in the hands of surprisingly small clusters of individuals. In jurisdictions like the ICJ or the WTO, it is common for the same handful of counsel to appear at most hearings alongside their clients.Footnote 113 Their knowledge of the intricacies of international adjudication grants them a competitive edge over new entrants in the market,Footnote 114 while their repeated participation in the proceedings makes them familiar and reliable faces in the courtroom.Footnote 115 Litigation before other international courts, like the ECtHR, has not yet reached comparable levels of concentration. There too, however, the social proximity between the court and the bar has grown tighter in recent years, with former judges and registry officials joining Strasbourg-based NGOs and law firms.Footnote 116

Likewise, the invisible army of clerks, assistants, and registry and secretariat lawyers works staunchly and discreetly to nudge the decisions of adjudicators, streamline and standardize their practices, and ensure consistency in jurisprudence.Footnote 117 Unlike judges, these actors are fully-fledged bureaucrats whose recruitment through public competitions is not subject to political oversight. Their long-tenure contracts, often outlasting the terms of service of adjudicators, makes them the institutional memory of international courts and tribunals.Footnote 118 The ‘critically important’ Footnote 119 contribution of judicial bureaucrats to the preparation, deliberation, and drafting of judgments is widely known across the inner circle of professional litigators, but is zealously kept secret to outsiders.Footnote 120 The few commentators attempting to shed light on the topicFootnote 121 are often met with scorn and accusations of unprofessionalism.Footnote 122 This double standard, defined by some as ‘hypocritical’,Footnote 123 testifies to the community’s desire to remain the only ones in the know, the sole initiates to the arcane mysteries of international adjudication.

Finally, scholarly production in the field is densely populated by ‘practitioner-academics’ who have direct stakes in the system and ‘stand[] to profit from its widespread acceptance’.Footnote 124 For instance, much of the writing on investment arbitration is done by authors who themselves ‘are involved’ in it as either adjudicators or counsel.Footnote 125 Similarly, European Union law scholarship is dominated by ‘authors working for institutions structurally geared towards the expansion and consolidation of a genuine European legal order’.Footnote 126 One might expect similar findings to apply, say, to human rightsFootnote 127 and trade lawFootnote 128 scholarship as well. This familiarity between the bench and the academe creates a favourable intellectual environment for the flourishing of international adjudication, but also poses an ‘obstacle for independent and clear positioning’. Footnote 129

Generally speaking, being an insider in the game means being acquainted with its rules, adopting strategies that resonate with other players, and ultimately shaping legal outcomes to an extent that is usually precluded to outsiders. Being ‘well-known to the Judges’ and understanding by experience ‘the difficulties, pitfalls and tricks of the trade’ Footnote 130 enables community members to discern which claims are more likely to stick and concentrate their resources on ‘rule-changes that are likely to make a tangible difference’. Footnote 131 With a little stretch of the imagination, one could say that the community has replaced external stakeholders as the immediate audience of international adjudication. When a court or tribunal issues a decision, it is often ‘speaking’ more directly to the legal professionals gravitating around it than to its broader political constituency or the general public. Footnote 132

Such a degree of socio-professional closure contributes to the independence and impartiality of international courts and ensures that extraneous factors and preoccupations are kept at bay. Yet, it can also give rise to frictions between the inner circle of community members and the outer circle of political stakeholders, especially when the latter feel unfairly marginalized in the day-to-day operations of judicial institutions. When this happens, one can witness a temporary re-entry of external forces into the community’s dynamics.

Two recent examples can help illustrate these tensions. The first is the downfall of the WTO Appellate Body. Once considered one of the most powerful international courts, since 2017 the Appellate Body has been facing the United States’ veto on the appointment of new adjudicators, eventually leading to a complete paralysis of its proceedings in December 2019. Footnote 133 Officially, the United States justified its blockade by accusing the Appellate Body of overstepping its judicial mandate in a number of ways. Footnote 134 However, it soon became clear that there was more at stake than a simple normative disagreement or a raw assertion of diplomatic might: rather, the attack on the Appellate Body was also a radical attempt by US political stakeholders to regain control of a process that they believed was slipping out of their hands. Footnote 135

In pursuit of this goal, the US delegation tried to persuade the WTO Director-General to sack the director of the ABS, Footnote 136 the legal bureaucracy that provides support to appellate adjudicators. It also threatened to freeze the WTO’s annual budget for 2020 unless other states agreed to draconian cuts to the Appellate Body’s funding. Footnote 137 Ultimately, nobody was fired, but ABS staff were reallocated to other WTO divisions. The offensive on the Appellate Body was also an offensive on the inner circle of professional WTO litigators, aimed at disrupting their quasi-monopoly over the conduct of appellate proceedings.

This backlash poses a formidable threat to the club of trade practitioners, which has been in turmoil since the beginning of the crisis. Professional feuds both inside and outside the WTO are reshuffling alliances and reconfiguring the community, whose participants are mobilizing to mitigate the impact on their career prospects. Footnote 138 For instance, in 2020, a number of WTO member states (excluding, of course, the United States) agreed to the Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Arrangement (MPIA), designed to temporarily replace ordinary appellate proceedings. While the new mechanism is still in its infancy, it bears highlighting that the core MPIA proposal was developed jointly by a state delegation and a trade law firm based in Geneva. Footnote 139

The second example is offered by the ongoing discussions of the institutional reform of ISDS.Footnote 140 Since its inception, this area of international law has been dominated by a select élite of practitioners enjoying a wide reputation and possessing highly concentrated professional capital. When, in 2017, the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) was tasked with working on ISDS reform, it became apparent that the negotiating states would not let the arbitration ‘mafia’Footnote 141 infiltrate the debate and perpetuate their dominance.

Faced with this hostility from outside political stakeholders, the inner circle of arbitration practitioners had mixed reactions. Some strove to keep control over the system, warning that the UNCITRAL project would ‘bring termites into [the] wooden house of investor state dispute resolution’.Footnote 142 Others showed a greater ability to adapt to the new environment and to secure a seat at the negotiating table. For instance, two papers co-authored by a leading arbitrator and one of her closest collaboratorsFootnote 143 offered the technical basis for the UNCITRAL discussions and are largely credited for catalyzing the reform process.Footnote 144 Thanks to their efforts, the two authors were included in Switzerland’s delegation and are now key actors in the debate.

To sum up, the international judicial community maintains unstable and unsettled boundaries vis-à-vis both international politics and the rest of the international legal profession. Through networked interaction, tight social relationships, and various forms of professional co-operation, community members carefully police and refurbish those boundaries to perpetuate the internal logics of their field and its continued autonomy from competing social fields. Such esprit de corps may suggest that the community is internally homogenous, heterarchical, and peaceful. But, as I discuss in the next section, nothing would be farther from the truth.

4. Bubbling beneath the surface: Competition, assertion, and contestation

Having outlined the external relations of the international judicial community, it is now time to untangle the conflictive interactions that occur inside the field. As discussed,Footnote 145 the community can be understood in Bourdieusian terms as the site of an endless confrontation among its participants, who amass and deploy various types of capital to consolidate their relative positions and secure the symbolic power to impose their particular visions as dominant and universal. Given that Bourdieu originally formulated his theory in relation to a localized and highly structured context – French society – his teachings should be handled with care when applied to international legal fields, where agents are ‘somehow more schizophrenic’ than at the domestic level.Footnote 146 Yet, even when employed in an ‘indicative and flexible fashion’,Footnote 147 field theory offers several valuable lessons about the specific inner dynamics of the community.

The first lesson is that capital is unevenly distributed across the community. Not all positions carry the same weight and not all voices are equally listened to. Footnote 148 Powerful social hierarchies, both formal and informal, shape the social relationships among community members, Footnote 149 with a handful of professionals sitting at the top of the pyramid and the majority slowly crawling up from the bottom. The most eminent actors in the field are widely recognizable throughout the international legal world, and some of them even break through with the general public. The rest of the lot is relegated to the underbelly of the judicial machinery.

These hierarchies exist, first, within each cluster of community actors.

Inside a court, judges enjoy an exalted position compared to their supporting legal staff.Footnote 150 Yet, not all judges are created equal. Most courts and tribunals attach formal significance to the role of their presidents or chairpersons, who often exercise greater powers and bear additional responsibilities than the rest of the bench. Some institutions, like the ECtHR and the WTO, contemplate two levels of jurisdiction, therefore placing first-instance adjudicators in a subordinate position vis-à-vis their appellate counterparts. Official prerogatives aside, certain judges possess informal qualities – experience, fame, fluency in the court’s working languages – that makes them perceived as more authoritative, more capable, or more reliable than others, thus becoming the object of admiration – or envy – by their colleagues. Footnote 151

The supporting legal bureaucracy, too, can be formally organized in tiers of seniority (as with the ABS) or be more horizontal (as with ICJ clerks or arbitral secretaries). Administrative personnel, translators, interpreters, and other non-lawyers usually come last in the court’s ranks. At the informal level, bureaucrats with a long-standing record of service are more knowledgeable about a court’s practice and jurisprudence than their more junior colleagues, Footnote 152 thereby wielding greater power in the conduct of proceedings and the definition of legal outcomes.Footnote 153

Meanwhile, law firms specializing in international litigation tend to mirror the structure and division of labour typical of the Anglo-Saxon market, from which they often originate. New recruits work for several years as salaried associates ‘for their employers’ clients as well as for their own’.Footnote 154 During that probation period, they are expected to meet stringent benchmarks and procure new business opportunities to move up the firms’ ranks. Indeed, advancement to partnership is by no means guaranteed, such that junior lawyers ‘are in constant battle with each other for resources and remuneration’. Footnote 155 Partners, whose earnings are calculated on the basis of equity, carefully manage the workforce and entertain good relationships with current and prospective clients. In the courtroom, they are usually in charge of delivering the main pleadings – thereby fostering their visibility among attendees – while associates tend to take the backseat, provide support, and pass notes – thus going almost unnoticed.Footnote 156 Regardless of their rank, private attorneys are but one part of the teams representing the parties in litigation. Frequently, they must contend with other actors – state agents, domestic industry representatives, external experts, etc. – who may hold different views and sensibilities, thereby creating potential frictions and competition within the teams themselves.Footnote 157

Second, informal hierarchies exist across clusters, i.e., community-wide, with certain professional profiles garnering more recognition than others.

Predictably, judges tend again to occupy the most prestigious spot. Given the symbolic power accorded to judicial interpretation, being appointed to an international court is widely regarded as the acme of one’s trajectory in the field. The total number of available positions on permanent courts is estimated at around 300 Footnote 158 – a small figure compared to the overall size of the community. When states nominate their candidates to the bench, they seldom do so based on standardized selection procedures. Often, a successful candidate owes the privilege to an inscrutable set of factors such as possessing the right nationality, holding personal and professional contacts, and more generally being at the right place at the right time. Footnote 159 Under these conditions, it would be difficult for even the most accomplished lawyer to deliberately plan to become an international judge.

Similar reverence is paid to top-tier investment arbitrators, who constitute an even smaller group. Capital in the ISDS arena is notoriously concentrated, with 20–30 arbitrators securing most appointments to tribunals and leaving the rest of their peers fighting for the scraps. The status acquired by the arbitration élite is the object of intense scholarly analysis. Footnote 160 As evidence of that status, the United States bestows the title of ‘Honorable’ on its nationals sitting on the US-Iran States Claims Tribunal, thereby equating them to federal judges. While most US members of the Tribunal do not make much of this title, some proudly sport it on their professional webpages. Footnote 161

University professors and prominent litigators vie for the second position in the hierarchy. Both clusters of actors enjoy widespread recognition within the field, and both offer a steady pool of candidates for international courts and tribunals. However, the types of capital that scholars and counsel deploy are quite different. The former advance their position by disseminating their opinions across the community. Academics stand in a ‘co-constitutive’ Footnote 162 relationship with judicial practice: on the one hand, it is that practice that creates the object of their studies; on the other, it is their theories, commentaries, and systematizations that generate the background knowledge necessary to structure the epistemic categories and the expert vernacular of practitioners. Footnote 163 Ideas legitimate judicial power, and judicial power enforces ideas.

Counsel, for their part, mobilize economic capital and channel clients into the dispute settlement process, thereby acting as ‘brokers’ that connect the demands of the parties with the legal supply of the courts. Footnote 164 Indeed, it is largely thanks to their entrepreneurship that international adjudication has expanded from a fragile political project to a robust node of global governance. Counsel’s allegiance to the litigants they represent is somewhat ambiguous: when they participate in proceedings, the do not only seek to win the case, but also to bolster their standing among their peers, develop a cordial relationship with the bench, and secure future hiring opportunities.Footnote 165 Hence, counsel’s prime source of capital ‘is the recognition of judges, not clients (who are merely proximate sources of capital)’. Footnote 166

At the bottom of the hierarchy we find the legion of clerks, secretariat and registry staff, and arbitral secretaries assisting the adjudicators. While, as mentioned, this cluster of actors constitutes the backbone of international courts and tribunals, its manifold activities take place mostly off the radar, concealed behind the closed doors of judicial institutions and largely neglected by external commentators.Footnote 167 Faceless by definition, judicial bureaucrats seldom enjoy the visibility necessary to rise to fame. Some of them relish this invisibility, and take great pleasure in the influence they wield behind the scenes.Footnote 168 Their vocation, as well as the source of their capital, resides in what Max Weber described as ‘technical superiority[,] [p]recision, speed, unambiguity, knowledge of the files, continuity, [and] discretion’. Footnote 169 For others, employment with the bureaucracy is a mere entry point into the community and, hopefully, a springboard towards more visible positions.Footnote 170

Interestingly, the ‘conversion rate’ Footnote 171 between social and economic capital is not 1:1. In fact, if we were to rank community members based on their income, the hierarchy would look a bit different. At the top, we would find big law firm partners and élite arbitrators. The former can charge in excess of USD 1,000 per hour, especially when working on large trade or investment cases. Footnote 172 The latter’s fees are capped at US$3,000 per day when the arbitration takes place under the auspices of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), and can rise up to US$6,000 per day if the arbitration is governed by the rules of the London Court of International Arbitration. Footnote 173 Next we would find permanent judges, whose remuneration, while varying across courts, can exceed US$200,000 per annum. Footnote 174 Judicial bureaucrats would come a distant third. Their net annual salaries differ widely depending on institutional affiliation and level of seniority, and indicatively range from US$60,000 (for newcomers) to US$150,000 (for top officials). Footnote 175 Finally, academic remuneration is highly dependent on the salary structure of each university, but would normally land in the lower regions of the chart. Of course, the fact that community participants may don multiple hats at once enables them to combine different sources of income.

Third, competition occurs not only within the same judicial institution, but also among different courts and tribunals.

The exponential growth of the profession at the turn of the century was accompanied by its progressive specialization into sectoral areas of expertise such as human rights, trade, investment, territorial delimitation, and international criminal law. The international judicial community is no stranger to this trend, and has been ‘fragmenting’ Footnote 176 into several sub-communities that operate largely independently of one another. Echoing a well-known metaphor, Footnote 177 one could say that the international judicial community resembles a constellation. Each court or tribunal is a star exerting its gravitational pull on the various planets – government departments, law firms, academic centres, and so on – that orbit around it in concentric circles, from centre to periphery.

Some gravitational fields may be stronger than others. Specialized knowledge may be more concentrated in certain sub-communities (e.g., the WTO, characterized by a highly sectarian expertise) than in others (e.g., the ICJ, which takes great pride in its ‘generalist’ outlook). Moreover, the trajectories of some planets may be attracted to the gravitational fields of more than one star, therefore creating overlaps between different sub-communities. Footnote 178 For instance, ICJ experts often cross into ISDS territory by appearing as arbitrators or counsel; Footnote 179 European Union law specialists have progressively come to infiltrate the WTO arena, with repercussions on the ethos, style, and tone of trade adjudicators; Footnote 180 regional human rights courts maintain tight relationships among their judges and legal bureaucracies, and carefully read each other’s judgments; Footnote 181 and so on.

Yet, none of the stars – not even the ICJ – can be deemed to sit at the centre of the constellation. No sub-community can lay claim to a truly neutral and universal outlook on the international legal world, which has become too vast, too pluralistic, and too complex for any one individual or group to master it all. Footnote 182 Instead, the various sub-communities ‘are necessarily partial and selective’. Footnote 183 The position that each occupies in the constellation shapes its social dynamics, its epistemic categories, and its operational boundaries. This polycentricity entails entry barriers and conversion costs for professionals wishing to transition from one sub-community to another. A senior lawyer trained in the practice of the WTO may struggle to land an equally senior position at a firm specializing in ISDS. A preeminent scholar in the field of European human rights law may not enjoy the same reputation in ICJ circles. And so on.

Seen from this angle, the emergence of ‘self-contained regimes’Footnote 184 in international law acquires a new meaning. Over time, the sub-community gravitating around each international court develops a set of dispositions as to what legal sources are trustworthy and what others are not, based on its specialized expertise. The operational closure of each sub-network fosters trust among its participants Footnote 185 and, at the same time, reinforces its epistemic bias. Footnote 186 Hence, the members of a sub-community do not only seek autonomy from the broader international legal profession – they also guard their turf from other sub-communities, which may constitute a source of ‘disturbing outside perspectives’. Footnote 187 Any attempt to transfer expertise, practices, or modes of thinking from one sub-community to another is considered a trespass that might shake the ‘context-preserving routine’. Footnote 188

Consider, for instance, the two ICSID arbitral awards rendered against Argentina in the CMS and Continental cases. In both disputes, Argentina sought to justify its measures based on the state of necessity under customary international law and specific treaty provisions. Footnote 189 The CMS tribunal, for the most part, addressed Argentina’s defence through the ‘traditional’ prism of the customary rules of state responsibility. Footnote 190 By contrast, the Continental tribunal observed that similarities existed between the defence raised by Argentina and the general exceptions enshrined in Article XX of the GATT. It therefore found it ‘more appropriate to refer to the GATT and WTO case law … rather than to refer to the requirement of necessity under customary international law.’ Footnote 191

The different approaches adopted by the two tribunals could be due to many factors, including the ways in which the parties presented their arguments. However, a plausible explanation is that the president of the CMS tribunal was a practitioner with extensive experience in general international law, Footnote 192 whereas the president of the Continental tribunal was a sitting member of the WTO Appellate Body. Footnote 193 The former was an insider to the ISDS field; the latter came from another sub-community carrying a baggage of ‘foreign’ expertise. Unsurprisingly, the ‘unorthodox’ approach of the Continental tribunal was harshly criticized by the incumbents in the ISDS regime, who found the tribunal’s reasoning ‘inadequate and flawed’, making ‘unsupported leaps to trade or other international law’, and threatening to ‘undermine the legitimacy of investor-State arbitration’. Footnote 194

This example nicely illustrates the second lesson we can learn from Bourdieu – specifically, from his observation that ‘technical competence … is inevitably social’. Footnote 195 The distribution of capital within the community is inseparable from the substance of legal activity. Ostensibly, the ‘ultimate object’ of the game of international adjudication is to persuade one’s audience that their legal opinion or solution to a given problem is ‘correct’. The ‘winner’, in principle, is he or she who succeeds in securing adherence to his or her own views. Footnote 196 However, ‘victory’ is not only a source of personal gratification – it is also a means to bolster one’s capital in the field. Thus, the interpretive and technical arguments put forward by community members can never be reduced to the expression of abstract and dispassionate beliefs, but always reflect the specific positions, the agendas, and the sheer ‘careerism’ Footnote 197 of the actors involved.

For instance, when a counsel pursues a sophisticated line of argument in court, they do merely wish to advance their client’s interests; they also seek to impress the judges with their interprétation savante and, possibly, secure a precedent they can exploit in future cases with other clients.Footnote 198 Likewise, when a scholar develops a new legal theory or taxonomy, they often undertake a ‘marketing campaign’ to disseminate it across courts and tribunals in the hope that practitioners will adopt it as their own, or even that adjudicators will cite it in their rulings. Footnote 199 Each actor’s endowment of capital determines, at any given moment, the persuasiveness and the deference accorded to their views. A reputable judge will think twice before following the advice of a new recruit to the supporting bureaucracy;Footnote 200 a first-year associate will have to work extra hard to include a certain argument in a submission against the will of a seasoned partner;Footnote 201 and so on.

The inextricable link between legal argument and social positioning brings us to the third and final lesson. Because the distribution of capital across the field can change over time, the social configurations of the international judicial community are not carved in stone, but ‘historically contingent’.Footnote 202 The competition among judges, bureaucrats, agents, counsel, and scholars does not serve only to entrench the logics of the community, but also to create spaces of contestation of power and hierarchies. Case after case, those actors adopt schemes, postures, and strategies that may be ‘risky or cautious, subversive or conservative’ Footnote 203 depending on the circumstances. The incumbents in the game have a natural tendency to perpetuate their position. Challengers have to come up with other plans, ranging from opportunistic deference to overt defiance, to get the upper hand.Footnote 204 At every turn, old alliances may break down and new ones emerge, redistributing capital in a continuous ‘context-transforming struggle’. Footnote 205

An example of these reshufflings is offered, once again, by the recent transformations of WTO adjudication following the demise of the Appellate Body.Footnote 206 While several commentators speak to an impending ‘dejudicialization’ of trade dispute settlement driven by member state interests,Footnote 207 what is also happening is an internal renegotiation of capital among trade adjudicators and the secretariat – or, to put it differently, between political appointees and technocratic experts. Both sides are working behind the scenes to assert their dominance in the conduct of proceedings and contain each other’s influence on the production of legal outcomes in the trade arena.Footnote 208 The terms of the renegotiation are historically determined. In the WTO’s early days, it was suggested that every adjudicator have a personal clerk, with whom they would have a one-to-one working relationship. Footnote 209 The proposal was ultimately scrapped in favour of secretariat divisions responding collectively to the whole bench. This seemingly innocuous organizational choice has, in fact, profoundly affected the structures, practices, and allegiances of the WTO judiciary, and has now turned into a bone of contention.Footnote 210 Every battle, however mundane, brings with it a host of ‘discarded possibles’, and every ‘reconstruction of genesis’ reminds us of the ‘possibility that things could have been (and still could be) otherwise’. Footnote 211

5. A community in action: From structures to practices

In the two previous sections, I sought to outline the social features of the international judicial community. Partly inspired by Bourdieu’s teachings, I listed its main participants, discussed how they relate to one another, described their co-operative quest for autonomy from competing social fields, and shed light on their hierarchies and competitive interactions. By now, it should be clear that the community is at once externally cohesive and internally conflictive. To conclude the discussion, it now bears reflecting on how this twofold structure affects the way community members go about their everyday business, contribute to the unfolding of judicial proceedings, and shape the piecemeal construction of legal outcomes at the international level. In other words, it is time to connect the field’s structures to its practices.

This is where the core tenets of practice theory find their way into the analysis. As mentioned, many contemporary scholars seek to move beyond the ‘rationalist’ and ‘norm-based’ accounts of adjudication that have dominated international legal thinking for much of the twentieth century. Footnote 212 In particular, practice theorists explore the structures of power and knowledge that enable and constrain agents’ perceptions and behaviour in their social spaceFootnote 213 and shape their engagement in a contingent and evolving set of activities. Footnote 214 Particularly relevant, for present purposes, is Adler and Pouliot’s definition of practices: to recall, practices are ‘socially meaningful patterns of action which, in being performed more or less competently, simultaneously embody, act out, and possibly reify background knowledge and discourse in and on the material world’. Footnote 215

This definition spells out four main attributes that distinguish practices from – and make them more than – simple action. Let us see how each of these attributes plays out in the specific context of the international judicial community, and how it intersects with Bourdieu’s insights on the sociology of the juridical field.

First, practices are ‘performances’. At its simplest, this means that international adjudication entails ‘a process of doing’ that has ‘no existence other than in [its] unfolding’. Footnote 216 Thus understood, this attribute is self-evident. The various members of the community engage in a variety of activities throughout the adjudicative process. Chief among these is the interpretation of the international rules applicable to the case at hand. According to many, this is the activity that defines the very essence of adjudication. Indeed, all community members take part, in one way or another, in the ‘symbolic struggle’ for appropriation of the meaning of legal texts: Footnote 217 agents and counsel through their briefs and oral arguments, judicial bureaucrats through their advice and internal memoranda, scholars through their articles, and adjudicators through their decisions.

However, legal interpretation does not exhaust the scope of international judicial practices. In fact, a large swathe of life at the court is taken up by tasks that are not of ‘interpretive’ in nature. For instance, state agents routinely co-ordinate with their political masters to define the goals and modes of recourse to international courts. Counsel spend time and energy reaching out to clients, devising business and litigation strategies, and cultivating amicable relationships with the bench.Footnote 218 Court bureaucrats digest vast amounts of information, summarize the litigants’ legal and factual submissions, and provide logistical support throughout proceedings.Footnote 219 Academics seek to secure chairs, funding, and visibility within their respective universities. Adjudicators often engage in extra-judicial activities such as lecturing, publishing, and outreach. And so on. Footnote 220

Whether interpretive or not, each act of ‘doing’ leaves a trace on the routine realities of litigation. Some traces are tangible: a counsel’s written submission, a bureaucrat’s memo, a folder of documentary evidence and, of course, the court’s final judgment are all embodied in the physical medium of printed paper. The corporeal properties of the object are not a mere wrap for content: in many instances, they take on a significance of their own. For instance, a thick dossier, one that contains lengthy party memorials and voluminous amounts of evidence, will typically make for a ‘big case’ requiring the allocation of additional time and staff resources to be processed; the length of a decision will be read as a proxy for the complexity of the issues addressed, the degree of harmony or discord among the judges, etc.Footnote 221 Other traces are physically intangible, but no less material: oral pleadings, deliberations, and conference presentations all generate a web of meaning that carries a certain weight, informs the behaviour of both speakers and listeners, and imparts direction to future activities.

But there is more to the word ‘performances’ than first meets the eye. One cannot think about that word without thinking about theatre. Footnote 222 From artists to semioticians, from literary critics to philosophers, many see everyday life as rife with instances of theatrical performance. Footnote 223 As Umberto Eco once noted, ‘[i]t is not theatre that is able to imitate life; it is social life that is designed as a continuous performance and, because of this, there is a link between theatre and life’. Footnote 224 Or, as musician David Byrne puts it, ‘there [are] lots of unacknowledged theater forms going on all around’ that ‘have been so woven into our daily routine that the artificial … aspect has slipped into invisibility’. Footnote 225

International judicial practices are no exception. The adjudicative process is a succession of carefully staged acts carried out by certain actors, directed at a certain audience, and following a script. Some steps of the process are more explicitly ‘performative’ than others. The delivery of an ICJ judgment, held in the solemn atmosphere of the Great Hall of Justice, is a largely ceremonial act symbolizing the triumph of justice over the cynicism of inter-state politics.Footnote 226 Similarly, court hearings are often tightly choreographed eventsFootnote 227 that publicly display the ‘theatricalization – in the sense of magical evocation, sorcery – of the united group consenting to the discourse that unites it’. Footnote 228 Yet, theatrics and rituals permeate many other corners of life at the court.

Second, practices are ‘patterned’, meaning that they tend to exhibit ‘certain regularities over time and space’. Footnote 229 Their repetition ‘reproduce[s] similar behaviors with regular meanings’, and ‘structures interaction’ within a socially organized context. Footnote 230 This attribute comports well with the iterative nature of international judicial proceedings. Although every dispute is unique in the legal issues it raises, the procedural steps that mark its unfolding are standardized. Every case invariably begins with the submission of written memorials by the complainant and the respondent, often followed by rejoinders and counter-rejoinders. These written filings are then processed by the bureaucrats assisting the court, who circulate internal memoranda to summarize their analyses and help adjudicators prepare for the next steps. After the written phase, most courts and tribunals hold hearings, where the merits of the case are discussed orally. After the hearings, the adjudicators convene for deliberations and cast their decisions about the issues at stake. Based on the adjudicators’ instructions, the final judgment is drafted – typically by the bureaucracy – and then reviewed, approved, and issued to the parties and the public.Footnote 231

Iteration is not limited to the procedural steps of litigation but, importantly, is entrenched in the social structure of the international judicial community. As discussed at length,Footnote 232 the community is a close-knit network whose participants know each other well, communicate regularly, entertain long-term professional relationships, and defend their club from external competition. In the game of adjudication, repeat players are the norm and one-shotters are the exception, and the social capital of each player stems in part from their experience and recurring participation in proceedings. It follows that international judicial practices occur within a ‘highly organized context’ and presents a strong measure of repetition. Footnote 233

The density and tightness of the community is deeply intertwined with the third attribute of international judicial practices, namely their being ‘performed more or less competently’ depending on the ‘background knowledge’ of the actors carrying them out. Footnote 234 The Bourdieusian notion of habitus, i.e., ‘the internalized schemes’ and the ‘practical sense of reality’ guiding agents’ behaviour,Footnote 235 proves particularly relevant here. The hallmarks of (in)competence in the community and the social recognition of its members do not reside in the abstract quality of the work performed. Instead, they are socially attributed by the community itself based on collectively held standards which, in turn, invariably reflect the dominant vision and the attendant distribution of capital at any given moment. Habitus tends to reproduce the very structures of which it is itself the product.Footnote 236 Through education, training, and work experience, new entrants in the community are initiated to the way things are done. Footnote 237 Over time, they master the doctrines, the argumentative techniques, the vernacular, the ethos, the aesthetics, and the mythologies of their peers and superiors, Footnote 238 and tend to reproduce them through communication and transmission of knowledge. Hence, habitus is not only a source of constraint for those who play the game of adjudication; it also enables them to make statements and take positions that will be accepted as ‘true’ or ‘valid’ by other players. Footnote 239

The outer limits of the game, beyond which no respectable player can venture, are dictated by doxa – to recall,Footnote 240 the set of unquestioned truths that define the universe of possible practices and discourses in the field. Footnote 241 International adjudication has no short supply of doxic beliefs: that law is better than politics; that politics is better than war; that judicialization fosters the predictability of behaviour on the world stage; and the like.Footnote 242 Incidentally, those beliefs aggrandize the self-perception of the community as indispensable to international affairs. Many of its members have become blind to the irreducible pluralism of global society. From their vantage point, it is easy to forget that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in their philosophy. Footnote 243

The habitus of the community, which reifies the structural power relations among its members, informs every aspect of life at the court, including practices that have little to do with legal argument. It is so, for instance, that a counsel may calibrate their argument so as to avoid potential conflicts with prospective clients;Footnote 244 that a newly appointed judge may accede to the views of a senior colleague out of deference;Footnote 245 and that a scholar’s theory may acquire visibility and semantic authority thanks to their astute positioning on the academic market.Footnote 246 This is due to the fourth and final attribute of international judicial practices: their ability to weave together the ‘discursive’ and the ‘material world’.Footnote 247 As mentioned,Footnote 248 the community knows no sharp distinction between technical argument and social positioning. Its legal debates cannot be abstracted from the objective conditions of competition among its participants. Thus, while the communications that punctuate judicial proceedings may be disguised as ‘legal discourse’, they always bear ‘material consequences for the litigants’. Footnote 249

The intersection between the social structures and the everyday practices of the community leads to one last question: namely, the interplay of freedom and constraint in the judicial interpretation of international law. What guides international courts and tribunals in deciding cases the way they do? What limitations and pressures do they encounter? And what agency and discretion do individual actors enjoy in the process?

As the preceding analysis suggests, the answer lies in the inner workings of the community itself, which can be described by the shorthand of structured contingency. ‘Contingency’, because the path that leads to the formation of an international judgment is not predetermined, but open-ended. Every step of the process contemplates moments of choice and purposeful action on the part of the professionals involved. Each actor has countless opportunities to voice their opinion, assert and resist claims, and exercise a discrete portion of agency to steer the course of proceedings. ‘Structured’, because while existing arrangements can be changed, ‘change unfolds within a context that includes systematic constraints and pressures’. Footnote 250 Departing too abruptly from the rules of the game can lead to professional reprimand, derision, or outright expulsion from the game itself.

Seen through the lens of structured contingency, the practices of the international judicial community are both the vehicle of reproduction that ensures predictability in international legal outcomes and the source from which legal change originates. Footnote 251

The community plays its stabilizing role in both an active and a passive way. Throughout the adjudicative process, it pushes and forces adjudicators by expressing views as to how certain issues should be addressed, how certain legal terms should be read, and what bodies of rules should be considered to solve the case. Once the judgment is rendered, it carefully tests its persuasiveness, ascribes (in)competence, and acts as the ultimate arbiter of professional recognition. At each step, community expectations determine the continued validity of legal standards and ensure jurisprudential continuity in a system without formal stare decisis. While a decision that slightly departs from canon will normally be tolerated, an abrupt change of direction will encounter resistance and be attacked as an anomaly, a deviation, or – heaven forbid! – an ‘irrational’ decision. Footnote 252 Hence, the community serves as the anchor that prevents adjudicators from sailing adrift, adopting ‘extreme’ decisions, and ripping the underlying social fabric apart.

But the community is not only a source of stability. Its practices also help explain how legal outcomes evolve over time.Footnote 253 After all, stability is only ‘an illusion created by the recursive nature of practice’, whereas change ‘is the ordinary condition of social life’. Footnote 254 Given the forms of competition that agitate the community,Footnote 255 the boundaries, priorities, and preoccupations of judicial regimes are ‘never inherently fixed or stable’, but are ‘constantly being renegotiated’. Footnote 256 The expert vocabularies in use in international courts are ‘sites of controversy and compromise where prevailing “mainstreams” constantly clash against minority challengers’. Footnote 257 Each agent modifies the form taken by arguments and the salience of texts, and traces ‘a set of divergent paths, mobilizing clans who confront each other with facts, precedents, understandings, opportunities or public morality, all of which are used to stoke the fire of the debate.’ Footnote 258

These tensions create paths of resistance and open the door to new legal approaches, new interpretive postures, new ways of doing things. Innovations are seldom presented as radical, lest they be dismissed out of hand. They will usually creep in through the backdoor – discussed as a side point during a meeting, inserted in the paragraph of a party submission or internal memo, etc.Footnote 259 The most successful will then slowly grow in the system – first as obscure footnotes buried in a judgment, then as obiter dicta in the main text, and finally as the new standard against which the community measures the persuasiveness of legal reasoning. Ultimately, change occurs when the dominant assumptions embedded in a judicial regime are successfully challenged and replaced by new assumptions, as a result of the piecemeal evolution of the power relationships and the relative distribution of capital among the actors involved. Whenever the judicial process culminates in a final decision, ‘it is never because pure law has triumphed, but because of the internal properties of these relations of force or these conflicts between heterogeneous multiplicities’. Footnote 260

6. Conclusion

In this article, I sought to map the socio-professional dynamics of one particular segment of the international legal profession: namely, the community of legal experts dealing with the judicial settlement of international disputes on a daily basis. Using the analytical tools of field sociology and practice theory, I conceptualized the community as the site of a confrontation among agents endowed with different amounts and types of capital, and shed light on the many forms of co-operation and competition that occur among them. First, I argued, the social structures of the community have facilitated its autonomization from the rest of the profession while, at the same time, providing the ground for a fierce contest for authority and recognition among its participants. Second, I connected those social structures to the everyday practices of the community, showing that the intersection between the two is a powerful driver of continuity and change in the interpretation and application of international law.

The picture that emerges from this account brings to the fore aspects of international adjudication that would otherwise go epistemically ‘unmarked’ Footnote 261 – all while letting other aspects slip into the background. Indeed, staring at the picture requires certain adjustments to the angle of vision that may prove unfamiliar to the more traditional international lawyers. The first adjustment relates to the identity of the protagonists of international judicial processes. Rather than treating the formal ‘subjects’Footnote 262 of international law as ‘reified’ and ‘self-standing’ units of analysis,Footnote 263 I suggest focusing on the individual and social actors through which those ‘subjects’ think, speak, act, and live. The second adjustment concerns the relationships and interactions among those actors. To the image of a harmonious and cosmopolitan ‘college’, I oppose the image of a conflictive universe marked by social and epistemic violence. The third adjustment is about the nature of legal processes and the operations that define them. Formal rules, principles an procedures are almost absent from the picture, replaced by competing practices, strategies, and positions. The international judgment, the magical artefact that unites the discipline, is not portrayed as a conclusive and coherent text, but as ‘the product of a symbolic struggle between professionals possessing unequal technical skills and social influence’. Footnote 264

To be sure, the picture remains blurry on the edges. By design, my cross-institutional inquiry cannot do full justice to the specificities of the various international judicial regimes and the socio-professional sub-communities that orbit around them. The social structures, the fault lines of struggle, and the relative value of different types of capital do vary between the ICJ and the ECtHR, the WTO and investment tribunals, etc. Moreover, the empirical link between the production of international judgments and the underlying socio-professional confrontations is notoriously difficult to establish given the confidentiality of proceedings. For lack of better alternatives, researchers are often forced to ‘reverse-engineer’ those confrontations from the little discrepancies, the slight non sequiturs, and the imperceptible logical leaps that are found in the texts of judgments themselves. Footnote 265

Yet, I see promise in continuing to explore the ‘micro-level detail’Footnote 266 by the international judicial community structures, perpetuates, and contests its endogenous dynamics. Those dynamics are not a simple corollary to the international legal process. They are the process. The relationships that tie together the community and pitch its participants against one another are, ultimately, what makes international law every day. Besides, is it even ‘always an advantage to replace an indistinct picture by a sharp one? Isn’t the indistinct one often exactly what we need?’ Footnote 267

Footnotes

*

I am grateful to Andrea Bianchi, Gleider Hernández, Daniel Litwin, Sophie Schiettekatte, Maria José Schmidt-Kessen, and Inga Winkler for their valuable advice on earlier drafts. I have also benefited from the comments of the participants in workshops at the European University Institute, the Geneva Graduate Institute, Central European University, and Utrecht University.

References

1 D. W. Kennedy, ‘One, Two, Three, Many Legal Orders: Legal Pluralism and the Cosmopolitan Dream’, (2006–2007) 31 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 641, at 650 (original emphasis).

2 See, among many, D. W. Kennedy, ‘The Politics of the Invisible College: International Governance and the Politics of Expertise’, (2001) European Human Rights Law Review 463; M. Koskenniemi, ‘The Fate of Public International Law: Between Technique and Politics’, (2007) 70 Modern Law Review 1; H. G. Cohen, ‘Finding International Law, Part II: Our Fragmenting Legal Community’, (2012) 44 New York University Journal of International Law and Politics 1049; M. Waibel, ‘Interpretive Communities in International Law’, in A. Bianchi, D. Peat and M. Windsor (eds.), Interpretation in International Law (2015), 147; J. d’Aspremont et al. (eds.), International Law as a Profession (2017); A. Roberts, Is International Law International? (2017); D. W. Kennedy, A World of Struggle: How Power, Law, and Expertise Shape Global Political Economy (2018); L. Leão Soares Pereira and N. Ridi, ‘Mapping the “Invisible College of International Lawyers” Through Obituaries’, (2021) 34 LJIL 67.

3 See generally J. d’Aspremont, ‘The Professionalisation of International Law’, in d’Aspremont et al., ibid., at 19.

4 D. W. Kennedy, ‘The Mystery of Global Governance’, (2008) 34 Ohio Northern University Law Review 827, at 851.

5 d’Aspremont et al., ‘Introduction’, in d’Aspremont et al., supra note 2, at 2.

6 J. d’Aspremont, ‘The Multidimensional Process of Interpretation: Content-Determination and Law-Ascertainment Distinguished’, in Bianchi, Peat and Windsor, supra note 2, at 119. See also, e.g., J. Brunnée and S. Toope, Legitimacy and Legality in International Law: An Interactional Account (2013).

7 A. M. Slaughter, ‘A Global Community of Courts’, (2003) 44 Harvard International Law Journal 191, at 192, 217.

8 O. Schachter, ‘The Invisible College of International Lawyers’, (1977) 72 Northwestern University Law Review 217, at 224.

9 B. De Sousa Santos, ‘Law: A Map of Misreading. Toward a Postmodern Conception of Law’, (1987) 14 Journal of Law and Society 279, at 297.

10 See K. J. Alter, The New Terrain of International Law: Courts, Politics, Rights (2014), at 4.

11 See, e.g., P. Bourdieu, ‘The Force of Law: Toward a Sociology of the Juridical Field’, (1987) 38 Hastings Law Journal 805.

12 See, e.g., E. Adler and V. Pouliot, ‘International Practices’, (2011) 3 International Theory 1.

13 M. R. Madsen, ‘Reflexive Sociology of International Law: Pierre Bourdieu and the Globalization of Law’, in M. Hirsch and A. Lang (eds.), Research Handbook on the Sociology of International Law (2018), 189, at 191.

14 See Bourdieu, supra note, at 816.

15 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 193.

16 See T. Soave, The Everyday Makers of International Law: From Great Halls to Back Rooms (2022).

17 These include so-called ‘clerks’ assigned to individual judges.

18 See, e.g., the interviews contained in D. Terris, C. P. R. Romano and L. Swigart, The International Judge: An Introduction to the Men and Women Who Decide the World’s Cases (2007), at 39–48 (Navi Pillay), 92–101 (Thomas Buergenthal), 131–46 (Georges Abi-Saab), 180–90 (Cecilia Medina Quiroga), and 212–20 (John Hedigan).

19 See, e.g., A. Pellet, ‘The Role of the International Lawyer in International Litigation’, in C. Wickremasinghe (ed.), The International Lawyer as a Practitioner (2000), 147.

20 See, e.g., H. Thirlway, ‘The Drafting of ICJ Decisions: Some Personal Recollections and Observations’, (2006) 5 Chinese Journal of International Law 15.

21 The expression is borrowed from T. Eagleton, Against the Grain: Essays 1975–1985 (1986).

22 T. Schatzki, ‘Keeping Track of Large Phenomena’, (2016) 104 Geographische Zeitschrift 4, at 6.

23 See, e.g., Y. Dezalay and B. Garth, Dealing in Virtue: International Commercial Arbitration and the Construction of a Transnational Legal Order (1996); H. Schepel and R. Wesseling, ‘The Legal Community: Judges, Lawyers, Officials and Clerks in the Writing of Europe’, (1997) 3 European Law Journal 165; M. R. Madsen, ‘From Cold War Instrument to Supreme European Court: The European Court of Human Rights at the Crossroads of International and National Law and Politics’, (2007) 32 Law and Social Inquiry 137; J. Meierhenrich, ‘The Practice of International Law: A Theoretical Analysis’, (2013) 76 Law and Contemporary Problems 1; S. Puig, ‘Social Capital in the Arbitration Market’, (2014) 25 EJIL 387; M. J. Christensen, ‘The Emerging Sociology of International Criminal Courts: Between Global Restructurings and Scientific Innovations’, (2015) 63 Current Sociology 825.

24 J. Dunoff and M. A. Pollack, ‘International Judicial Practices: Opening the Black Box of International Courts’, (2018) 40 Michigan Journal of International Law 47, at 60.

25 See Schachter, supra note 8, at 217.

26 Ibid.

27 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 197.

28 See Kennedy, supra note 4, at 848.

29 G. Abi-Saab, Cours Général de Droit International Public (1987), Vol. 207, at 93.

30 See, e.g., A. Bianchi, ‘The International Legal Regulation of the Use of Force’, (2009) 22 LJIL 651, at 653–4; A. Bianchi, ‘The Game of Interpretation in International Law: The Players, the Cards, and Why the Game is Worth the Candle’, in Bianchi, Peat and Windsor, supra note 2, at 40.

31 See d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 22. See also S. Neff, Justice among Nations: A History of International Law (2014), at 303–4.

32 T. Schultz and R. Kovacs, ‘The Rise of a Third Generation of Arbitrators? Fifteen Years after Dezalay and Garth’, (2012) 28 Arbitration International 161, at 162. See also Dezalay and Garth, supra note 23, at 24; d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 20–3.

33 Koskenniemi, supra note 2, at 1.

34 J. E. Alvarez, ‘The New Dispute Settlers: (Half) Truths and Consequences’, (2003) 38 Texas International Law Journal 405, at 411.

35 T. M. Franck, Fairness in International Law and Institutions (1995), 6. See also d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 23.

36 See Alvarez, supra note 34, at 406.

37 See Alter, supra note 10.

38 See Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 48.

39 J. Klabbers, ‘Virtuous Interpretation’, in M. Fitzmaurice, O. Elias and P. Merkouris (eds.), Treaty Interpretation and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: 30 Years On (2010), 17, at 18.

40 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 199.

41 See, e.g., H. Thirlway, ‘The Proliferation of International Judicial Organs: Institutional and Substantive Questions’, in N. Blokker and H. Schermers (eds.), Proliferation of International Organizations: Legal Issues (2001), 251, at 255.

42 Think, for instance, of ISDS: there, in the 1980s and 1990s, a handful of pioneering practitioner-academics developed the very legal doctrines that, a decade later, would be used to consolidate the system and make it thrive. See, e.g., S. Schill, ‘W(h)ither Fragmentation? On the Literature and Sociology of International Investment Law’, (2011) 22 EJIL 875, at 876. Another example is the ICC, where NGOs and legal advocacy groups played a key role in the negotiation of the Rome Statute. See, e.g., Z. Pearson, ‘Non-Governmental Organizations and the International Criminal Court: Changing Landscapes of International Law’, (2006) 39 Cornell International Law Journal 243.

43 M. Shapiro, ‘Judicialization of Politics in the United States’, (1994) 15 International Political Science Review 101, at 109.

44 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with former ICJ and ECtHR registry lawyers (The Hague, October 2017).

45 Interviews with two counsels specializing in ISDS and WTO litigation, respectively (Geneva, March 2015).

46 J. Frank, Law and the Modern Mind (1949), 46.

47 I. Brownlie, ‘The Calling of the International Lawyer: Sir Humphrey Waldock and His Work’, (1983) 54 British Yearbook of International Law 7, at 68. See also A. Fischer-Lescano and G. Teubner, ‘Regime-Collisions: The Vain Search for Legal Unity in the Fragmentation of Global Law’, (2004) 25 Michigan Journal of International Law 999, at 1014 (noting that international courts and tribunals are located at ‘the very center of global law’).

48 See, e.g., T. Soave, ‘Who Controls WTO Dispute Settlement? Socio-Professional Practices and the Crisis of the Appellate Body’, (2019) 29 Italian Yearbook of International Law 13.

49 See, e.g., Bianchi, supra note 30, at 40–2; F. Zarbiyev, ‘On the Judge Centredness of the International Legal Self’, (2021) 32 EJIL 1139.

50 P. M. Haas, ‘Introduction: Epistemic Communities and International Policy Coordination’, (1992) 46 International Organization 1, at 3. See also, e.g., M. Noortmann, ‘The International Law Association and Non-State Actors: Professional Network, Public Interest Group or Epistemic Community?’, in J. d’Aspremont (ed.), Participants in the International Legal System: Multiple Perspectives on Non-State Actors in International Law (2011), 233.

51 See, e.g., N. Klein, ‘Who Litigates and Why’, in C. P. R. Romano, K. J. Alter and Y. Shany (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication (2014), 569, at 574–5; J. d’Aspremont, Epistemic Forces in International Law: Foundational Doctrines and Techniques of International Legal Argumentation (2015); A. Bianchi, ‘Epistemic Communities in International Arbitration’, in T. Schultz and F. Ortino (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of International Arbitration (2020), 569; F. Cardenas and J. d’Aspremont, ‘Epistemic Communities in International Adjudication’, Max Planck Encyclopedia of International Procedural Law, available at opil.ouplaw.com/view/10.1093/law-mpeipro/e2425.013.2425/law-mpeipro-e2425.

52 S. Fish, Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities (1980), at 338–55.

53 See, e.g., I. Johnstone, ‘Treaty Interpretation: The Authority of Interpretive Communities’, (1991) 12 Michigan Journal of International Law 371; A. Bianchi, ‘Textual Interpretation and (International) Law Reading: The Myth of (In)Determinacy and the Genealogy of Meaning’, in P. Bekker, R. Dolzer and M. Waibel (eds.), Making Transnational Law Work in the Global Economy: Essays in Honour of Detlev Vagts (2010), 34; see Klabbers, supra note 39; I. Venzke, How Interpretation Makes International Law: On Semantic Change and Normative Twists (2012); d’Aspremont, supra note 6; Waibel, supra note 2.

54 L. Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations (1958), para. 43.

55 S. Fish, Doing What Comes Naturally: Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in Literary and Legal Studies (1989), at 141.

56 See d’Aspremont, supra note 6, at 114.

57 See Haas, supra note 50, at 3. See also, e.g., A. Wendt, Social Theory of International Politics (1999), 215–20.

58 A. Kazun, ‘Juridical Field or Legal Profession? Comparison of Bourdieusian Theory and Theory of Professionalism for Studies of Legal Community’, (2016) 15 Comparative Sociology 572, at 580. See also d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 28.

59 P. Bourdieu and L. Wacquant, An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology (1992), at 243.

60 D. Nicolini, Practice Theory, Work And Organization: An Introduction (2012), 5.

61 See Bourdieu, supra note 11, at 817.

62 Ibid. (emphasis omitted).

63 G. Messenger, ‘The Practice of Litigation at the ICJ: The Role of Counsel in the Development of International Law’, in Hirsch and Lang, supra note 13, at 212.

64 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 196.

65 See Bourdieu, supra note 11, at 839.

66 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 190.

67 Ibid., at 196.

68 Ibid., at 197.

69 See Bourdieu and Wacquant, supra note 59, at 97 (emphasis added).

70 See A. Rasulov, ‘The Discipline as a Field of Struggle: The Politics and the Economy of Knowledge Production in International Law’, in A. Bianchi and M. Hirsch (eds.), International Law’s Invisible Frames: Social Cognition and Knowledge Production in International Legal Processes (2021), 180, at 193–5.

71 P. Bourdieu, ‘The Forms of Capital’, in J. G. Richardson (ed.), Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education (1986), 241, at 242.

72 P. Bourdieu, ‘Cultural Reproduction and Social Reproduction’, in J. Karabel and A. H. Halsey (eds.), Power and Ideology in Education (1977), 487, at 488.

73 See Bourdieu, supra note 71, at 242.

74 Ibid., at 248.

75 See Bourdieu and Wacquant, supra note 59, at 98 (emphasis omitted). See also Bianchi, supra note 30, at 49.

76 See Bourdieu and Wacquant, ibid., at 97 (emphasis added).

77 Ibid.

78 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 192.

79 Ibid., at 191.

80 See Bourdieu and Wacquant, supra note 59, at 98 (emphasis omitted).

81 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 191.

82 Ibid., at 198.

83 P. Bourdieu, Outline of a Theory of Practice (translated by R. Nice, 1977), at 72 (emphasis omitted).

84 Ibid. (emphasis omitted).

85 N. M. Rajkovic, T. Aalberts and T. Gammeltoft-Hansen, ‘Introduction’, in N. M. Rajkovic, T. Aalberts and T. Gammeltoft-Hansen (eds.), The Power of Legality: Practices of International Law and Their Politics (2016), 1, at 12.

86 A. Reckwitz, ‘Toward a Theory of Social Practices: A Development in Culturalist Theorizing’, (2002) 5 European Journal of Social Theory 243, at 245–6.

87 É. Wenger, Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning and Identity (1998), at 47.

88 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 4.

89 Ibid.

90 See, e.g., Brunnée and Toope, supra note 6; T. Aalberts and I. Venzke, ‘Moving Beyond Interdisciplinary Turf Wars: Towards an Understanding of International Law as Practice’, in d’Aspremont et al., supra note 2, 287.

91 See Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24; N. Stappert, ‘Practice Theory and Change in International Law: Theorizing the Development of Legal Meaning through the Interpretive Practices of International Criminal Courts’, (2020) 12 International Theory 33.

92 E. Adler and V. Pouliot, ‘International Practices: Introduction and Framework’, in E. Adler and V. Pouliot (eds.), International Practices (2011), 3, at 4–5.

93 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 197.

94 See Cohen, supra note 2, at 1066.

95 See Bourdieu, supra note 83, at 2.

96 See, e.g., L. Helfer and A.-M. Slaughter, ‘Why States Create International Tribunals: A Response to Professors Posner and Yoo’, (2005) 93 California Law Review 899, at 946–9.

97 See Soave, supra note 48, at 17.

98 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat. See also A. Vauchez, ‘Communities of International Litigators’, in Romano, Alter and Shany, supra note 51, at 661; see d’Aspremont et al., supra note 5, at 8; T. Soave, ‘The Politics of Invisibility: Why Are International Judicial Bureaucrats Obscured from View?’, in F. Baetens (ed.), Legitimacy of Unseen Actors in International Adjudication (2019), 323, at 343.

99 According to some data, about 40% of the judges sitting on permanent international courts ‘have significant academic credentials’ (see Terris, Romano and Swigart, supra note 18, at 20) and one third of investment arbitrators are former or current scholars (J. A. Fontoura Costa, ‘Comparing WTO Panelists and ICSID Arbitrators: The Creation of International Legal Fields’, (2011) 1 Oñati Socio-Legal Series 1, at 17). Recently, the President of the ICJ has taken steps to reduce so-called ‘moonlighting’, i.e., the practice of ICJ Judges serving as arbitrators in their spare time. See, e.g., C. Musto, ‘New Restrictions on Arbitral Appointments for Sitting ICJ Judges’, EJIL Talk!, 5 November 2018, available at www.ejiltalk.org/new-restrictions-on-arbitral-appointments-for-sitting-icj-judges/.

100 Interviews with two ISDS tribunal assistants (Geneva, May 2015 and Turin, May 2016).

101 For instance, it is customary for trade law firms to hire former WTO secretariat officials, panellists, and even, on occasion, Appellate Body members. See Soave, supra note 48, at 24.

102 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with an IACtHR registry lawyer (via Skype, April 2015) and a counsel specializing in ECtHR litigation (via Skype, June 2015).

103 See J. H. H. Weiler, ‘The Rule of Lawyers and the Ethos of Diplomats: Reflections on the Internal and External Legitimacy of WTO Dispute Settlement’, (2001) 35 Journal of World Trade 191, at 195; K. Hopewell, ‘Multilateral Trade Governance as Social Field: Global Civil Society and the WTO’, (2015) 22 Review of International Political Economy 1128, at 1142–3.

104 See Soave, supra note 48, at 18.

105 Interviews with an ECtHR registry lawyer (Geneva, February 2015), an ICJ registry lawyer (Paris, April 2016), and a counsel specializing in WTO litigation (Geneva, September 2016).

106 M. M. Shapiro and A. Stone Sweet, On Law, Politics, and Judicialization (2002), at 175.

107 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 196.

108 R. Howse, ‘The World Trade Organization 20 Years On: Global Governance by Judiciary’, (2016) 27 EJIL 9, at 25.

109 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings; interview with an IACtHR registry lawyer (via Skype, April 2015).

110 See Vauchez, supra note 98, at 656–7.

111 See, e.g., M. Kazazi, ‘Commentary on the Hague Principles of Ethical Standards for Counsel Appearing Before International Courts and Tribunals’, (2011) 10 The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals 17, at 18; J. Crawford, ‘The International Law Bar: Essence Before Existence?’, in d’Aspremont et al., supra note 2, at 338.

112 Interview with a counsel appearing in multiple ICJ proceedings (The Hague, October 2014).

113 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement hearings. See also Pellet, supra note 19; K. T. Gaubatz and M. MacArthur, ‘How International Is “International” Law?’, (2001) 22 Michigan Journal of International Law 239; S. P. Kumar and C. Rose, ‘A Study of Lawyers Appearing before the International Court of Justice, 1999–2012’, (2014) 25 EJIL 893, at 902; Soave, supra note 48, at 22–5.

114 See M. Galanter, ‘Why the “Haves” Come out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change’, (1974) 9 Law and Society Review 95, at 98.

115 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement hearings; interview with a counsel appearing in multiple ICJ proceedings (The Hague, October 2014). See also K. Highet, ‘A Personal Memoir of Eduardo Jiménez de Aréchaga’, (1994) 88 Proceedings of the American Society of International Law 577, at 579.

116 Interview with a counsel specializing in ECtHR litigation (via Skype, June 2015). See also K. Dzehtsiarou and D. K. Coffey, ‘Legitimacy and Independence of International Tribunals: An Analysis of the European Court of Human Rights’, (2014) 37 Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 271, at 314. Moreover, the EctHR the Court is sometimes called upon to decide on state-sponsored individual applications, i.e., cases in which the applicant’s attorney fees are covered by their home state. For instance, Cyprus had high stakes in the outcomes of the Loizidou v. Turkey case, which might explain why a claimant of modest economic means could afford Ian Brownlie as counsel. See Loizidou v. Turkey, Merits, Judgment of 18 December 1996, No. 15318/89, ECHR-1998, para. 5; Loizidou v. Turkey (Article 50), Judgment of 28 July 1998, No. 15318/89, ECHR-1998, para. 8. Similarly, Azerbaijan might have had a sufficient interest in the Chiragov and others v. Armenia dispute to hire Malcolm N. Shaw as its third-party litigator. See Chiragov and others v. Armenia, Judgment of 16 June 2015, No. 13216/05, ECHR-2015, para. 10.

117 See generally S. Cartier and C. Hoss, ‘The Role of Registries and Legal Secretariats in International Judicial Institutions’, in Romano, Alter and Shany, supra note 51, at 712.

118 Ibid., at 722; see Soave, supra note 16, at 113–16.

119 D. Caron, ‘Towards a Political Theory of International Courts and Tribunals’, (2007) 24 Berkeley Journal of International Law 401, at 416.

120 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat. For discussion, see Soave, supra note 98.

121 See, e.g., Thirlway, supra note 20; K. Pelc, ‘Sausage-Making at the WTO’, in M. Elsig, R. Polanco and P. van den Bossche (eds.), International Economic Dispute Settlement: Demise or Transformation? (2021), 47; J. Pauwelyn and K. Pelc, ‘Who Guards the “Guardians of the System”? The Role of the Secretariat in WTO Dispute Settlement’, (2022) 116 AJIL 534.

122 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat. See also Soave, supra note 98, at 332–3.

123 C. Partasides, ‘Secretaries to Arbitral Tribunals’, in B. Hanotiau and A. Mourre (eds.), Players’ Interaction in International Arbitration (2012), 84.

124 W. L. Kidane, The Culture of International Arbitration (2017), at 64–5.

125 See Schill, supra note 42, at 894.

126 See Schepel and Wesseling, supra note 23, at 171.

127 A good case in point is the ECtHR’s adoption of the pilot judgment procedure (PJP), a procedural device that enables the joint examination of large numbers of cases arising from the same underlying problems. The introduction of the PJP was advocated in a series of strategically timed scholarly articles written by the incumbents in the European human rights regime. See, e.g., L. Wildhaber, ‘Pilot Judgments in Cases of Structural or Systemic Problems on the National Level’, in U. Deutsch and R. Wolfrum (eds.), The European Court of Human Rights Overwhelmed by Applications: Problems and Possible Solutions (2009), 69. This point emerged during an interview with a former ECtHR registry lawyer (The Hague, October 2017).

128 For instance, a market-leading textbook on WTO law is co-authored by a former Appellate Body member and the former director of the Appellate Body Secretariat(ABS). See P. van den Bossche and W. Zdouc, The Law and Policy of the World Trade Organization: Text, Cases, and Materials (2022).

129 See Schill, supra note 42, at 894. See also J. Dunoff, ‘International Legal Scholarship at the Millennium’, (2000) 1 Chicago Journal of International Law 85, at 89.

130 See Highet, supra note 115, at 579.

131 See Galanter, supra note 114, at 100.

132 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings. See also Soave, supra note 48, at 18–19.

133 See Soave, supra note 48, at 14–15.

134 See, e.g., Office of the US Trade Representative, Report on the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization (2020), available at www.ustr.gov/sites/default/files/Report_on_the_Appellate_Body_of_the_World_Trade_Organization.pdf.

135 See Soave, supra note 48, at 30–1.

136 See S. Charnovitz, ‘The Attack on the Appellate Body: Events of 5 December 2019’, International Economic Law and Policy Blog, 5 December 2019, available at ielp.worldtradelaw.net/2019/12/the-attack-on-the-appellate-body-events-of-5-december-2019.html.

137 See B. Baschuk, ‘A US Offer to Keep the WTO Alive Comes With Painful Conditions’, Bloomberg News, 26 November 2019, available at www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-11-26/a-u-s-offer-to-keep-the-wto-alive-comes-with-painful-conditions.

138 Participation-observation of the WTO secretariat; interview with a counsel specializing in WTO litigation (Geneva, August 2019). See also B. Baschuk ‘WTO Faces Cliff-Edge Crisis Next Week as Mediator Eyes Departure’, Bloomberg News, 2 December 2019, available at www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-12-02/wto-faces-cliff-edge-crisis-next-week-as-mediator-eyes-departure.

139 S. Andersen et al., ‘Using Arbitration under Article 25 of the DSU to Ensure the Availability of Appeals’, CTEI Working Paper 2017-17 (2017), available at repository.graduateinstitute.ch/record/295745?ln=en.

140 See generally A. Roberts, ‘Incremental, Systemic, and Paradigmatic Reform of Investor-State Arbitration’, (2018) 112 AJIL 410; A. Roberts and T. St John, ‘The Originality of Outsiders: Innovation in the Investment Treaty System’, (2023) 33 EJIL 1153.

141 See Dezalay and Garth, supra note 23, at 10; C. A. Rogers, ‘The Vocation of the International Arbitrator’, (2005) 20 American University International Law Review 957, at 967; Puig, supra note 23, at 423.

142 L. Pelucacci, ‘Hon. Charles N. Brower Delivers Keynote Address at International Arbitration Conference’, Fordham Law News, 27 November 2017, available at news.law.fordham.edu/blog/2017/11/27/hon-charles-n-brower-delivers-keynote-address-international-arbitration-conference/. See also C. N. Brower and J. Ahmad, ‘Why the “Demolition Derby” That Seeks to Destroy Investor-State Arbitration?’, (2022) 91 Southern California Law Review 1139.

143 G. Kauffman-Kohler and M. Potestà, ‘Can the Mauritius Convention Serve as a Model for the Reform of Investor-State Arbitration in Connection with the Introduction of a Permanent Investment Tribunal or an Appeal Mechanism?’, CIDS Working Paper (2016); G. Kauffman-Kohler and M. Potestà, ‘The Composition of a Multilateral Investment Court and of an Appeal Mechanism for Investment Awards’, CIDS Supplemental Report (2017).

144 Interviews with two ISDS tribunal assistants (Turin, May 2016 and The Hague, October 2017).

145 See Section 2, supra.

146 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 197.

147 Ibid.

148 See Bianchi, supra note 30, at 40–2.

149 See d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 35.

150 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat.

151 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings; interviews with an ICJ registry official (Paris, April 2016) and an IACtHR secretariat official (via Skype, April 2015). See also Terris, Romano and Swigart, supra note 18, at 66–7.

152 See, e.g., C. A. Rogers, ‘Apparent Dichotomies, Covert Similarities: A Response to Joost Pauwelyn’, (2016) 109 AJIL Unbound 294, at 297.

153 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings; interview with an ECtHR registry official (Geneva, February 2015).

154 J. Flood, ‘Lawyers as Sanctifiers: The Role of Elite Law Firms in International Business Transactions’, (2007) 14 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 35, at 42.

155 Ibid., at 50.

156 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement hearings; interview with a counsel appearing in multiple ICJ proceedings (The Hague, October 2014).

157 See, e.g., Pellet, supra note 19, at 157–60; M. N. Shaw, ‘The International Court of Justice: A Practical Perspective’, (1997) 46 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 831; see Soave, supra note 16, at 59–60.

158 See L. Swigart and D. Terris, ‘Who are International Judges?’, in Romano, Alter and Shany, supra note 51, at 621. See also Terris, Romano and Swigart, supra note 18, at 17.

159 See Swigart and Terris, ibid., at 633.

160 See, e.g., Dezalay and Garth, supra note 23; see Puig, supra note 23; J. Pauwelyn, ‘The Rule of Law Without the Rule of Lawyers? Why Investment Arbitrators Are from Mars, Trade Adjudicators from Venus’, (2015) 109 AJIL 761.

161 See, e.g., Twenty Essexwebsite, ‘The Honorable Charles N. Brower’, available at www.twentyessex.com/people/charles-brower/.

162 G. I. Hernández, ‘The Responsibility of the International Legal Academic: Situating the Grammarian Within the “Invisible College”’, in d’Aspremont et al., supra note 2, 160.

163 See ibid., at 160–1.

164 See Vauchez, supra note 98, at 657.

165 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings; interviews with two counsel specializing in WTO and ISDS litigation, respectively (Geneva, March 2015).

166 See Messenger, supra note 63, at 211 (emphasis added).

167 See Soave, supra note 98.

168 Interviews with two ICJ registry lawyers (via Skype, March 2015 and Paris, April 2016), an ECtHR registry lawyer (Geneva, February 2015), and an ISDS tribunal assistant (Geneva, May 2015).

169 M. Weber, Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology (G. Roth and C. Wittich eds. 1978), at 973.

170 Interviews with a former ICJ registry lawyer (The Hague, October 2017), an ECtHR registry lawyer (Geneva, March 2015), an IACtHR secretariat lawyer (via Skype, April 2015), and an ISDS tribunal assistant (Turin, May 2016).

171 See Bourdieu, supra note 71, at 248.

172 See, e.g., Aceris Lawwebsite, ‘The Costs of Arbitration’, available at www.acerislaw.com/the-costs-of-arbitration/.

173 See, e.g., D. Rosert, The Stakes Are High: A Review of the Financial Costs of Investment Treaty Arbitration (2014), at 10–11.

174 See, e.g., M. Simons, ‘In The Hague’s Lofty Judicial Halls, Judges Wrangle over Pay’, New York Times, 20 January 2019, available at www.nytimes.com/2019/01/20/world/europe/hague-judges-pay.html (reporting that ICJ Judges are paid US$230,000/annum as of 2019); O. Bowcott, ‘UK Nominees for Judge at European Court of Human Rights Revealed’, Guardian, 28 April 2016, available at www.theguardian.com/law/2016/apr/28/uk-nominees-for-judge-at-european-court-of-human-rights-revealed (estimating the net annual salary of ECtHR Judges at €200,000).

175 See, e.g., ICJ website, Vacancy announcement (accessed 29 August 2020) (fixing the indicative minimum net annual remuneration for ICJ clerks at US$63,806); WTO Committee on Budget, Finance and Administration, 2019 WTO Salary Survey, WT/BFA/W/471 (7 March 2019) (indicating that gross annual salaries range from CHF90,881 for G7 officers to CHF216,168 for G11 directors).

176 See Cohen, supra note 2. See also, e.g., A. Bianchi, ‘Looking Ahead: International Law’s Main Challenges’, in D. Armstrong (ed.), Routledge Handbook of International Law (2009), 392, at 404; Waibel, supra note 2.

177 See B. Simma and D. Pulkowski, ‘Of Planets and the Universe: Self-Contained Regimes in International Law’, (2006) 17 EJIL 483.

178 See Cohen, supra note 2, at 1068.

179 But see note 99, supra.

180 See generally T. Soave, ‘European Culture and WTO Dispute Settlement: Thirty Years of Socio-Legal Transplants from Brussels to Geneva’, (2020) 19 The Law and Practice of International Courts and Tribunals 107.

181 Interviews with an IACtHR secretariat lawyer (Geneva, June 2015) and a former ECtHR registry lawyer (The Hague, October 2017). See also, e.g., Terris, Romano and Swigart, supra note 18, at 120.

182 See J. Crawford, Chance, Order, Change: The Course of International Law (2014), 153.

183 Ibid., at 153.

184 See Simma and Pulkowski, supra note 177.

185 See R. S. Burt, Brokerage and Closure: An Introduction to Social Capital (2005), 93–7.

186 Ibid., at 168.

187 See Venzke, supra note 53, at 157.

188 R. M. Unger, False Necessity: Anti-Necessitarian Social Theory in the Service of Radical Democracy (2001), 32.

189 CMS Gas Transmission Company v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/01/8, Award, 12 May 2005, para. 309; Continental Casualty Company v. Argentina, ICSID Case No. ARB/03/9, Award, 5 September 2008, para. 160.

190 See CMS v. Argentina, supra note 189, para. 315.

191 See Continental v. Argentina, supra note 189, para. 192.

192 See A. Ross, ‘Francisco Orrego Vicuña 1942–2018’, Global Arbitration Review, 3 October 2018, available at www.globalarbitrationreview.com/gallery/francisco-orrego-vicuna-1942-2018.

193 See WTO website, Giorgio Sacerdoti, available at www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dispu_e/popup_giorgio_sacerdoti_e.htm.

194 J. E. Alvarez and T. Brink, ‘Revisiting the Necessity Defense: Continental Casualty v. Argentina’, in K. P. Sauvant (ed.), Yearbook of International Investment Law and Policy 2010–2011 (2012), 315, at 358.

195 See Bourdieu, supra note 11, at 817.

196 See Bianchi, supra note 30, at 36.

197 P. Schlag, ‘US CLS’, (1999) 10 Law and Critique 199, at 210. See also P. Schlag, ‘Normativity and the Politics of Form’, (1991) 139 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 801, note 125.

198 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings.

199 Interviews with former ICJ and ECtHR registry lawyers, both active in academic life (The Hague, October 2017). This, incidentally, opens the door to a plethora of legal-technical scholarship eager to ‘imitate judicial discourse’. P. Schlag, ‘Spam Jurisprudence, Air Law, and the Rank Anxiety of Nothing Happening (A Report on the State of the Art)’, (2009) 97 Georgetown Law Journal 803, at 819.

200 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with an ICJ registry lawyer (The Hague, February 2015) and an ECtHR registry lawyer (Geneva, February 2015).

201 Interviews with two counsel specializing in WTO and ISDS litigation, respectively (Geneva, March 2015).

202 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 198 (emphasis added).

203 See Bourdieu and Vacquant, supra note 59, at 98.

204 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with an ECtHR registry lawyer (Geneva, February 2015), an ISDS tribunal assistant (Geneva, May 2015), and an IACtHR secretariat lawyer (via Skype, April 2015).

205 See Unger, supra note 188, at 32.

206 See Section 3, supra.

207 See, e.g., R. H. Steinberg, ‘The Impending Dejudicialization of the WTO Dispute Settlement System?’, (2018) 112 Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 316; J. R. Basedow, ‘Why De-Judicialize? Explaining State Preferences on Judicialization in World Trade Organization Dispute Settlement Body and Investor-to-State Dispute Settlement Reforms’, (2022) 16 Regulation and Governance 1362.

208 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings; interview with a counsel specializing in WTO litigation (Geneva, September 2016). For discussion see Pauwelyn and Pelc, supra note 121.

209 See D. P. Steger, ‘The Founding of the Appellate Body’, in G. Marceau (ed.), A History of Law and Lawyers in the GATT/WTO: The Development of the Rule of Law in Multilateral Trading System (2015), 447, at 452.

210 See Soave, supra note 16, at 110.

211 P. Bourdieu, L. Wacquant and S. Farage, ‘Rethinking the State: Genesis and Structure of the Bureaucratic Field’, (1994) 12 Sociological Theory 1, at 4.

212 See Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 52.

213 See Reckwitz, supra note 86, at 245–6.

214 See Rajkovic, Aalberts and Gammeltoft-Hansen, supra note 85, at 12.

215 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 4.

216 Ibid., at 6.

217 See Bourdieu, supra note 11, at 827.

218 Interviews with counsels specializing in ICJ, WTO, and ISDS litigation (The Hague, October 2014 and Geneva, March 2015).

219 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with two ICJ registry lawyers (via Skype, March 2015 and Paris, April 2016), an IACtHR secretariat lawyer (via Skype, April 2015), and an ISDS tribunal assistant (Geneva, May 2015).

220 For a more comprehensive typology of international judicial practices see, e.g., Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 65–85.

221 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings.

222 See P. Auslander, From Acting to Performance: Essays in Modernism and Postmodernism (1997), at 4.

223 See, e.g., U. Eco, ‘Semiotics of Theatrical Performance’, (1977) 21 The Drama Review 107, at 113; D. Byrne, How Music Works (2012), at 64.

224 See Eco, ibid., at 113.

225 See Byrne, supra note 224, at 64.

226 See Soave, supra note 16, at 1–4.

227 See ibid., at 256–74.

228 P. Bourdieu, On the State: Lectures at the College de France, 1989-1992 (translated by D. Fernbach, 2014), at 63.

229 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 6.

230 Ibid.

231 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings. See also, e.g., ICJ, ‘Resolution Concerning the Internal Judicial Practice of the Court’ adopted pursuant to Article 19 of the Rules of Court, 12 April 1976.

232 See Section 2, supra.

233 See Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 62.

234 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 6–7 (emphasis omitted).

235 See Madsen, supra note 13, at 197.

236 See Bourdieu, supra note 83, at 72 (emphasis omitted).

237 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat. See also J. Gross Stein, ‘Background Knowledge in the Foreground: Conversations about Competent Practice in “Sacred Space”’, in Adler and Pouliot, supra note 92, at 89.

238 See, e.g., d’Aspremont, supra note 3, at 33–4; D. W. Kennedy, ‘The Disciplines of International Law and Policy’, (1999) 12 LJIL 9; P. Schlag, ‘The Aesthetics of American Law’, (2002) 115 Harvard Law Review 1047.

239 See, e.g., S. B. Ortner, Anthropology and Social Theory: Culture, Power and the Acting Subject (2006), at 3; see Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 54.

240 See Section 2, supra.

241 See, e.g., P. Bourdieu, ‘Structures, Habitus, Power: Basis for a Theory of Symbolic Power’, in N. B. Dirks, G. Eley and S. B. Ortner (eds.), Culture/Power/History: A Reader in Contemporary Social Theory (1994), 164.

242 Participant-observation of the WTO secretariat; interviews with an IACtHR registry lawyer (via Skype, April 2015) and an ISDS tribunal assistant (Turin, May 2016).

243 Forgive me, Shakespeare. W. Shakespeare, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (ca. 1600), 1.5.187–188.

244 Interviews with two counsel specializing in WTO and ISDS litigation, respectively (Geneva, March 2015).

245 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings.

246 Interviews with former ICJ and ECtHR registry lawyers, both active in academic life (The Hague, October 2017).

247 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 4.

248 See Section 4, supra.

249 See Dunoff and Pollack, supra note 24, at 62.

250 S. Marks, ‘False Contingency’, (2009) 62 Current Legal Problems 1, at 2.

251 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 18.

252 For example, Harm Schepel and Rein Wesseling forcefully described how a decision of the European Court of Justice that deviated from well-established case law was harshly criticized in specialized law reviews as being ‘“inexplicable and contradictory”, without “convincing or sufficient motivation”, leaving … a “worrisome jurisprudential void”’. See Schepel and Wesseling, supra note 23, at 185–6.

253 See generally Stappert, supra note 91.

254 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 18.

255 See Section 3, supra.

256 See Adler and Pouliot, supra note 12, at 18.

257 M. Koskenniemi, ‘The Politics of International Law: 20 Years Later’, (2009) 20 EJIL 7, at 12.

258 B. Latour, The Making of Law: An Ethnography of the Conseil d’État (2010), at 192.

259 Participant-observation of WTO dispute settlement proceedings.

260 Ibid.

261 See W. Brekhus, ‘A Sociology of the Unmarked: Redirecting Our Focus’, (1998) 16 Sociological Theory 34.

262 See Bianchi, supra note 30, at 39.

263 See Vauchez, supra note 98, at 655–6.

264 See Bourdieu, supra note 11, at 827.

265 See E. Jouannet, ‘La Motivation ou le Mystère de la Boîte Noire’, in H. Ruiz Fabri and J. M. Sorel (eds.), La Motivation des Décisions des Juridictions Internationales (2008), 251.

266 G. A. Sarfaty, ‘Corporate Actors as Translators in Transnational Lawmaking’, (2021) 115 AJIL Unbound 278.

267 See Wittgenstein, supra note 54, para. 71.