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Static and Evolutive Treaty Interpretation
A Functional Reconstruction

How should international treaties be interpreted over time? This book addresses what evolutive interpretation looks like in reality.

Christian Djeffal (Author)

9781107543645, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 13 December 2018

450 pages, 7 b/w illus. 7 tables
23 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm, 0.65 kg

How should international treaties be interpreted over time? This book offers fresh insights on this age-old question. The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) sets out the rules for interpretation, stipulating that treaties should be interpreted inter alia according to the 'ordinary meaning' of the text. Evolutive interpretation has been considered since the times of Gentili and Grotius, but this is the first book to systematically address what evolutive interpretation looks like in reality. It sets out to address how and under what circumstances it can be said that the interpretation of a treaty evolves, and under what circumstances it remains static. With the VCLT as its point of departure, this study develops a functional reconstruction of the rules of treaty interpretation, and explores and analyses how the International Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights have approached the issue.

Part I. Definitions, Assumptions and Method: 1. Two paths to interpretative method
2. Suggested solutions
3. Mode of inquiry: functional reconstruction
Part II. The Rule of Interpretation in the VCLT: Method and Methodology: 4. Historical account of the means of interpretation
5. Cardinal cores of the rule: features of the process
6. Interpretative knots: the system of the VCLT revisited
7. Shout of encore: evolutive interpretation in the context of the VCLT
Part III. Court Practice: 8. Profiling courts: a framework of analysis
9. The International Court of Justice: peacemakers and disputants
10. The European Court of Human Rights: an aging activist
Part IV. Summary and Conclusions: 11. Summary and conclusions.

Subject Areas: Public international law [LBB], Law [L], International relations [JPS]

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