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9 J. Int'l Disp. Settlement 1 (2018)

handle is hein.journals/jloildte9 and id is 1 raw text is: 



Journal of International Dispute Settlement, 2018, 9, 1-27
doi: 10.1093/jnlids/idx021
Article


   Shakespearean Legal Thought in International

                          Dispute Settlement

                      Thomas Schultz* and Franqois Ost**



                                    ABSTRACT
   In this article, the authors examine the contributions of Shakespearean legal thought to
   our understanding of core aspects of international dispute settlement. These aspects
   include: the sweeping role of masks in law and in the resolution of disputes; the con-
   struction and deconstruction of authority; the purpose of law in arousing desire and
   thus action; the limits in recognizing informal international law as law; the benefits of
   exaggeration; the problematic ambition of adjudicators; the key role of passion, against
   rationality, in understanding and dealing with international disputes; the decision-
   making  resources to be found in logics of life; exercising measure in the enforcement
   and reach of law; remembering that law deals with human beings in our quest for law's
   purity and systematic organization; resisting single-mindedness; the relevance of a dia-
   lectic form of proportionality; and the inescapable need to embrace uncertainty.
   The  authors also discuss the general relevance of law and literature, and law and the-
   atre, for all manner of legal professionals and review Shakespeare's own legal back-
   ground and thus his a priori ability to deal with legal matters.

                                INTRODUCTION
Thinking  outside the box  may be  a voguish credo, but we  lawyers, academic or not,
have a tendency  to embrace  it more often as a figure of speech than as an actual prin-
ciple of action. Interdisciplinary thinking may be a constant mantra, but less often is
it clear what that really means. And  its actual practice is yet rarer. So 'Shakespeare
and  International Dispute Settlement' may  appear  to be quite a bit outside the box,
to the point that the box of international dispute settlement seems forgotten entirely.
The  late International Court of Justice judge Gerald Fitzmaurice would  probably  be
all too happy  to concur: 'the real fault of the lawyers', he opined, 'probably is that
they  have not, as lawyers, been  single-minded  enough,  and  have  not resisted the
temptation  to stray into other fields'.I Lawyers, he thought, should really deal with
just law.


*   King's College London, Dickson Poon School of Law; Graduate Institute of International and
    Development Studies, Geneva, Department of International Law. Email: Thomas.Schultz@kcl.ac.uk,
    Thomas.Schultz@graduateinstitute.ch
 ** Saint-Louis University, Brussels, Faculty of Law.
 1  Gerald Fitzmaurice, 'The United Nations and the Rule of Law' (1953) 38 Trans Grotius Soc 135, 142.


 © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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