<div><br></div><div>Chapter 1. The Multifaceted Notion of Time in International Law (Klara Polackova Van der Ploeg).- Part I. Constructing and Attributing Meaning to Time in International Law.- Chapter 2. Lawyers as Creators of Law’s Temporal Reality: A Pragmatic Approach to International Law (Eric Wyler).- Chapter 3. Human Rights in Time: Temporalization of Human Rights in Historical Representation (Juhana Mikael Salojärvi).- Chapter 4. Interstellar Justice Now: Back to the Future of International Law (Bérénice Kafui Schramm).- Chapter 5. Digressing Towards Justice: International Criminal Law’s Narrative of Moral Transit Through Violence (Timothy Waters).- Part II. Time in International Lawmaking.- Chapter 6. How Instant and Universal International Law is Born and How it Dies: The 1856 Declaration of Paris (Jan Martin Lemnitzer).- Chapter 7. Incrementalism in Lawmaking: The Development of Normative Frameworks of Protection for Forcibly Displaced Persons (Rob Grace).- Chapter 8. The Politics of Time in Domestic and International Lawmaking (Tommaso Soave).- Chapter 9. Life Cycles of International Law as a Noetic Unity: The Various Times of Law-Thinking (Thomas Schultz).- Part III. Time and the Operation of International Law.- Chapter 10. Time-Travelling Rules of Interpretation: Of ‘Time-Will’ and ‘Time-Bubbles’ (Panos Merkouris).- Chapter 11. Time and Tide Wait for No One: The Curious Consideration of Time in International Investment Treaty Law (Robert Howse).- Chapter 12. The Relevant Time for Assessing Jurisdiction: The International Court of Justice and the Ratione Temporis Objection in the Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia) Case (Lorenzo Palestini).- Chapter 13. Of Relevant Dates and Political Processes: State Succession and the Dissolution of the Former Yugoslavia (Asier Garrido-Muñoz).- Chapter 14. China, Confucian Time and International Law: A Normative and Behavioral Account (Matthias Vanhullebusch).- Part IV. International Law between Change and Stability.- Chapter 15. International Law Through Time: On Change and Facticity of International Law (Klara Polackova Van der Ploeg).- Chapter 16. The Development of International Law, Perception, and the Problem of Time (Gregory Messenger).- Chapter 17. Change and Adaptation in International Environmental Law: The Challenge of Resilience (Jaye Ellis).- Part V. Transformations of International Legal Concepts in Time: Continuity, Discontinuity, Recurrence.- Chapter 18. The ‘Minimum Standard of Treatment’ in International Investment Law: The Story of the Emergence, the Decline and the Recent Resurrection of a Concept (Patrick Dumberry).- Chapter 19. Peace Agreements Between Rupture and Continuity: Mediating Time in International Law (Philip Kastner).- Chapter 20. Overlooking Continuity: National Minorities and ‘Timeless’ Human Rights (León Castellanos-Jankiewicz).- Chapter 21. Self-determination as Ideology: The Cold War, the End of Empire, and the Making of UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (14 December 1960) (Victor Kattan)</div>