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Legal Sightseeing and International Law


ISBN13: 9781041031734
To be Published: February 2026
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £39.99





This book is an invitation to pause and wonder at the spectacular yet mundane practice that we have come to call legal sightseeing.

Increasingly, international courthouses are becoming top-tourist destinations that host public events, exhibitions, and tours. But international law also pops up in more everyday spaces: as the theme for an organised city run, or as a symbol printed on a t-shirt or an image on a cookie jar. Legal sightseeing stands for this broad category of encounters between ‘international law’ and ‘the public’ that encompasses many different activities, sites, artefacts, and participants. The book presents a rich collection of images and research that introduces legal sightseeing as both the phenomenon under study and an experimental research methodology. Structured as a catalogue, the book covers a wide range of iconic and surprising instances of legal sightseeing, located for example, at the former American Embassy in The Hague, the Museum of White Terror in Taipei, in Bulgaria’s capital city, Sofia, and at more traditional sites such as the Peace Palace and Courtroom 600 in Nuremberg. Moreover, every chapter advances a particular aspect of legal sightseeing as an innovative, visually oriented and collaborative method of research. By revisiting a selection of projects curated under the legal sightseeing umbrella, the book contributes to academic discussions on international law’s visual turn, its spaces and materiality, and the plurality of international law’s audiences. Concretely, it offers readers hands-on examples of how to integrate art-based methods such as collaging, drawing and photography into legal research and teaching practices.

Legal Sightseeing and International Law is an interdisciplinary catalogue that will be a timely resource to students of public international law, politics and art. The book will also engage readers interested in the intersections of socio-legal studies, critical legal studies, legal anthropology, and international relations. Moreover, it will appeal to legal professionals, artists and members of the general public.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
1. Introduction
2.Curating Legal Sightseeing
3. Ice Cream Not War: A multi-sensory visit to the Peace Palace grounds
4. Concrete Imaginaries: A guided tour through Brussels and The Hague
5. Building Brutality: Collaborative explorations of an abandoned embassy
6. Pause and Wonder
7. Looking for Law: Legal sightseeing as a mode of conferencing in Bulgaria
8. White Terror: A student visit to The National Museum of Human Rights in Taiwan
9. Being There: Visiting courthouses now and then
10.Conclusion