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
Biography
Sofia Stolk and Renske Vos are assistant professors teaching international law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. They are experts on international law’s visual qualities. Their research focuses on the use of images and imagery in international courts, the architecture of international institutions, the possibilities of art in destabilising international law, the depiction of international law and human rights in film, the narrative visualisations present in stories told by international law experts, the advancement of visual methodologies such as collaging, walking, and curation, and uses of legal design to create both physical and affective experiences of justice.
"This is a book that makes you see and experience international law anew. Legal Sightseeing and International Law explores what happens when people encounter international law in odd places such as runs, coffee mugs or exhibitions rooms. Original and thought-provoking."
Professor Wouter Werner, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands.“‘Get on the train, baby!’ Legal Sightseeing and International Law is a magical conducted tour of the worlds of international law, near and far, intimate and expansive, quotidian and spectacular. You will be dazzled, refreshed, and left thinking; and will ever after experience your surroundings differently.”
Professor Surabhi Ranganathan, University of Cambridge, UK.






