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OverviewWhen the world's most consequential disputes reach international courts, the conflict rarely ends - it changes form. A territorial line becomes a question of jurisdiction; a naval incident becomes a fight over evidence; an economic confrontation becomes a debate about treaty meaning. In those procedural transformations, power does not vanish. It learns new grammar. Law at the Barrel begins from this geopolitical paradox: states often denounce international institutions as toothless, yet they litigate with intensity when the stakes are highest, because a court can reshape what others will believe, support, and enforce. Cyrus Ildren shows how international adjudication functions as a strategic arena in which states pursue advantage through choices that look technical but are politically decisive. The book explains how governments select venues and exploit overlaps through forum shopping, how standards of proof and disclosure constraints determine what can be credibly claimed, and why remedies and enforcement limits shift attention to reputational and coalition effects. Across institutions ranging from general courts to trade panels and arbitration, Ildren traces how procedure structures the contest: what counts as a fact, who gets heard, what is postponed, and what becomes irreversible. Written for students, general readers, and policy-minded analysts, Law at the Barrel offers a framework for reading cases without treating them as mere morality plays. You will learn to recognise legal narrative as a form of signalling to allies and domestic audiences, and to evaluate outcomes in terms of bargaining space, legitimacy, and compliance politics rather than simple win-loss scores. The result is a more realistic view of how law constrains and enables state action in a fractured order - and a clearer understanding of why, even in an age of rivalry, so many governments keep returning to court. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cyrus IldrenPublisher: Vij Books Imprint: Vij Books Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.730kg ISBN: 9789377942687ISBN 10: 9377942683 Pages: 422 Publication Date: 20 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationCyrus Ildren is a writer and researcher interested in how legal language travels through the real machinery of state power. His work approaches international adjudication not as an abstract system of rules but as a living practice shaped by institutions, incentives, and competing publics. He is drawn to the places where formal principle meets strategic necessity: the careful construction of a jurisdictional argument, the quiet politics of evidence, and the way a single paragraph in a judgment can reframe years of diplomacy.Ildren writes in an academic nonfiction voice for readers who want clarity without simplification. He pays close attention to procedure, because procedure is where lofty commitments become operational choices. Across his work, he treats courts as arenas of persuasion and constraint, where governments attempt to convert complex disputes into legible stories that allies can repeat and domestic audiences can accept.A recurring thread in his thinking is the post-1945 effort to channel conflict into institutions without pretending that power disappears. That tension, between restraint and rivalry, gives his writing its animating question: what it means to seek justice and advantage at the same time. Law at the Barrel reflects his commitment to intellectual honesty about both the value and the limits of international courts, and to a style of analysis that respects readers enough to show the gears, not just the slogans. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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