07 Feb A Blogging Hiatus and a Book
Although I’ve blogged with Opinio Juris for more than six years now, I would never describe myself as a frequent blogger; at my best, I’ll give you 2 posts a week, more often just one. Of late, however, my blogging has been even more sporadic. Here’s the reason:
After more than two years of work, of which the last 3 months were particularly intense, I submitted a draft manuscript for The Oxford Guide to Treaties to OUP at the end of January. The Guide is designed to be a comprehensive and current overview of treaty law and practice for academics and practitioners alike. It combines 25 chapters on all the basic issues that arise in treaty-making, (including formation, application, interpretation and exit) with a survey of common treaty clauses, including 350 examples from existing treaties. The book is due in print this summer, but feel free to pre-order your copy now. I’m sure I’ll blog about it more in the coming months (as well as a few treaty-related issues I picked up along the way). For now, however, I’d love reader feedback on the proposed cover above.
And for those of you who want more details on the project itself, a table of contents follows the jump.
The Oxford Guide to Treaties
Contents
Introduction – Duncan B Hollis
I. Foundational Issues
Chapter 1: Defining Treaties – Duncan B Hollis
Chapter 2: Alternatives to Treaty-Making – MOUs as Political Commitments – Anthony Aust
Chapter 3: Who Can Make Treaties? International Organizations – Olufemi Elias
Chapter 4: Who Can Make Treaties? The European Union – Marise Cremona
Chapter 5: Who Can Make Treaties? Other Subjects of International Law – Tom Grant
Chapter 6: NGOs in International Treaty-Making – Kal Raustiala
II. Treaty Formation
Chapter 7: Making the Treaty – George Korontzis
Chapter 8: Treaty Signature – Curtis A Bradley
Chapter 9: Provisional Application of Treaties – Robert E Dalton
Chapter 10: Managing the Process of Treaty Formation – Depositaries & Registration – Annebeth Rosenboom and Arancha Hinojal-Oyarbide
Chapter 11: Treaty Reservations – Edward T Swaine
III. Treaty Application
Chapter 12: The Territorial Application of Treaties– Syméon Karagiannis
Chapter 13: Third Party Rights & Obligations in Treaties – David J Bederman
Chapter 14: Treaty Amendments – Jutta Brunnée
Chapter 15: Domestic Application of Treaties – David Sloss
Chapter 16: State Succession in Respect of Treaties – Gerhard Hafner & Gregor Novak
Chapter 17: Treaty Bodies and Regimes – Geir Ulfstein
Chapter 18: Treaty Conflicts and Normative Fragmentation – Christopher J Borgen
IV. Treaty Interpretation
Chapter 19: The Vienna Convention Rules on Treaty Interpretation – Richard Gardiner
Chapter 20: Specialized Rules of Treaty Interpretation – International Organizations – Catherine Brölmann
Chapter 21: Specialized Rules of Treaty Interpretation – Human Rights – Başak Çali
V. Avoiding or Exiting Treaty Commitments
Chapter 22: The Validity and Invalidity of Treaties – Jan Klabbers
Chapter 23: Reacting against Treaty Breaches – Bruno Simma and Christian J Tams
Chapter 24: Exceptional Circumstances and Treaty Commitments – Malgosia Fitzmaurice
Chapter 25: Terminating Treaties – Laurence R Helfer
VI. Treaty Clauses
Initial Decisions on Treaty-Making
1. Distinguishing Political Commitments from Treaties
2. Object and Purpose
3. Participation Conditions for States
4. Participation Conditions for Non-State Actors
5. NGO Involvement
Conditions on Joining a Treaty
6. Consent to be Bound
7. Reservations
8. Declarations and Notifications
Constituting the Treaty and its Dissemination
9. Languages
10. Annexes
11. Entry into Force
12. The Depositary
Applying the Treaty
13. Provisional Application
14. Territorial and Extraterritorial Application
15. Federal States
16. Relationships to Other Treaties
17. Derogations
18. Dispute Settlement
Amendments
19. Standard Amendment Procedures
20. Simplified Amendment Procedures
The End of Treaty Relations
21. Withdrawal or Denunciation
22. Suspension
23. Duration and Termination
Duncan, congratulations!
Congratulations! I work as a treaty lawyer at the Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade and your table of contents got me excited. A number of the subjects are ones which we deal with regularly, frequently without having the time to investigate them in as much depth as we would like. I am also looking forward to blog postings on the law of treaties.
I’ll be working on convincing our budget masters to order a copy of the book!
Congrats. For what it’s worth, I like the cover.