Part 1: Introduction
1 Ways of Thinking about Objectivity
Philip M. Bender
Part 2: Objectivity and Legal Interpretation
2 Subjectivism, Objectivism, and Intuitionism in Legal Reasoning: Avoiding the Pseudos
Hans Christoph Grigoleit
3 Historical Arguments, Dynamic Interpretation, and Objectivity: Reconciling Three Conflicting Concepts in Legal Reasoning
Franz Bauer
Part 3: Objectivity and Constitutional Law
4 The Law between Objectivity and Power from the Perspective of Constitutional Adjudication
Peter M. Huber
5 Conceptual and Jurisprudential Foundations of the Debate on Interpretive Methodology in Constitutional Law: An Argument for More Analytical Rigor
Daniel Wolff
Part 4: Objectivity and Private Law
6 The Role for Remedial Discretion in Private Law Adjudication
Ben Köhler
7 The Essential-Matters Doctrine (Wesentlichkeitsdoktrin) in Private Law: A Constitutional Limit to Judicial Development of the Law?
Victor Jouannaud
8 Private International Law between Objectivity and Power
Andreas Engel
Part 5: Objectivity and Criminal Law 9 Algorithmic Crime Control between Risk, Objectivity, and
Power
Lucia Sommerer
10 Innocence: A Presumption, a Principle, and a Status
Martín D. Haissiner
Part 6: Objectivity and International Arbitration
11 Stateless Justice: The Evolutionary Character of International Arbitration
Fabio Núñez del Prado
12 International Arbitration as a Project of World Order: Reimagining the Legal Foundations of International Arbitration
Santiago Oñate
Part 7: Objectivity and Interdisciplinary Perspectives of Economics and Literature
13 Economic Analysis of Law: Inherent Component of the Legal System
Peter Zickgraf
14 From the Furies to ‘Off with Their Heads’: The Complex Inter-Relation between Law and Power in the Legal-Literary Canon
Emilia Jocelyn-Holt
Part 8: Structural Objectivity
15 Metaphors Lawyers Live by: Cognitive Linguistics and the Challenge for Pursuing Objectivity in Legal Reasoning
Jan-Erik Schirmer
16 The Citizenship Duality
Alvin Padilla-Babilonia