In
The World Bank’s Lawyers
Dimitri Van Den Meerssche does a great service to legal scholarship on
international organizations by insisting that the place of law therein
is not guaranteed, and by noticing that the forms law takes therein are
variegated and tangled. From an international legal point of view,
intergovernmental organizations can seem like a port in the storm of
public-private, informal, jurisdiction-defying global governance.
Intergovernmental organizations prize their constitutional treaties; use
legal instruments like treaties and decisions to carry out their
purposes; often feature adjudication as a dispute settlement mechanism;
and declare their commitment to the rule of law at every available
opportunity. The place of law looks like a no-brainer in such contexts.
The World Bank’s Lawyers
complicates and destabilizes these certainties. It presents a
socio-legal study of the office of the General Counsel, the Legal
Vice-Presidency of the World Bank. The place of law is both obvious and
not obvious in the office of the General Counsel. As the seat of law in
the Bank, what the office does is obviously law; but under some leaders,
Van Den Meerssche’s shows, what the office does is not obviously law.
This review homes in on this must-be-cannot-be moment. It suggests that
the book’s analysis – that law is precarious and multifarious within the
World Bank – could be pushed further by engaging with an old saw of a
question; what is law? The World Bank’s Lawyers
suggests ways of reframing this familiar question in progressive
socio-legal terms. The analysis Van Den Meerssche offers is not
doctrinal. His descriptions of the modes of law and lawyering cultivated
under successive General Counsels draw on interviews and observations
made during a three-month stint in the General Counsel’s Office. And
although he draws on a deluge of documentation, his analysis of this
material is not an exercise in doctrinal legal interpretation. The book
usefully contextualizes traditional preoccupations – notably the
prohibition on interference in the political affairs of member states
contained in the Bank’s constitutional document – in a narrative about
the slow transformation of a bureaucratic office.
In this telling, law emerges as unstable, changeable, and determined
in large part by the agenda of the General Counsel. Focusing on the
tenures of three office holders – Ibrahim Shihata (1983-1998), Roberto
Dañino (2003-2006), and Anne-Marie Leroy (2009-2016) – The World Bank’s Lawyers
describes three distinct modes of law and lawyering. Shihata elevated
law’s status in the Bank, sending down authoritative opinions about the
limits of Bank activity established in its Articles of Association. The
traditional Public International Law mode of law Shihata nurtured
reflected (and held together) an institutional ensemble in which the
Bank’s executive leadership and managerial machinery had to pay
attention to the sovereign member states on the Board of Directors. Law
morphed during Dañino’s tenure; a change intensified under Leroy. Law
stopped being a limit and became an enabling mechanism – enabling, that
is, of the Bank’s executive agenda. The wheels of change from a
doctrinal ideal of law under Shihata, to law in a decidedly managerial
mode under Leroy were greased by Dañino’s use of human rights to trump
doctrine. Doctrinal international law came to be seen as a logjam in the
way of progressive human rights, which were incorporated into the
Bank’s executive agenda. This laid the foundation for Leroy to institute
a mode of lawyering-as-risk-management. Shihata’s authoritative
proclamations appeared as risk averse and not merely unhelpful in the
achievement of institutional objectives, but actively inimical.
In tracing the metamorphosis of law and lawyering through these
General Counsels’ tenures, Van Den Meerssche draws some conclusions
about formal and instrumental aspects of law. Suggesting that “law is a
contingent cultural technique invested with evolving aspirations and
ideals” (p. 2), he emphasises that law is a kind of institutional glue
(as one might expect from a Latourean, networked account). As such, the
forms law and lawyering take are bound up with the character of the
institution they hold together. Law is “precarious” and “ever-shifting”
(p. 1), the book explains. Both insights invite more empirical work: to
delv deeper into the workings of the General Counsel’s office and to
situate that office in a broader institutional landscape. The rest of
the review suggests some ways in which the two insights – law’s
precariousness and its shifting character – might be taken further by
future studies inspired by Van Den Meerssche’s work.
Law’s Precariousness
The book reminds lawyers – especially those working in and on
international organizations – that they ought not to assume the presence
of law in social relations (p. 279). Van Den Meerssche productively
troubles the long-held certainty that ubi societas, ibi ius. Taking as its focus the office of the General Counsel, The World Bank’s Lawyers
can safely bracket the question to the extent that where there are
lawyers, there is law. I wonder, however, whether this analytical
convenience hasn’t affected the study’s conclusions.
Elsewhere,
I have argued that lawyers can sometimes be remarkably unreflective
about law’s presence in ensembles of global governance. Work on
‘legalization’ – whether critical or affirmative – tends to assume
rather than show that law is or ought to be involved. The effect is to
shelve the admittedly ennui-inducing question, “what is international
law?”. It may be an unanswerable old saw of a question, but taking it
seriously is necessary if we are to understand whether and how law is
precarious.
The main storyline of precariousness in The World Bank’s Lawyers
is law’s shift from issuing authoritative interpretations of the World
Bank’s Articles of Agreement (under Shihata) to playing an also-ran part
in risk management processes (under Leroy).
One direction for further study suggested by this insight is
psychological. While Van Den Meerssche insists on description and wisely
demurs from providing a causal account, his book made me wonder why
Leroy and Dañino so readily gave up the authority Shihata had garnered
for the Legal Vice-Presidency. Renouncing authority is unusual –
irrational, even. Institutional relevance means acting as a team-player
and signing up to the institutional consensus. The World Bank’s Lawyers
shows how lawyers have gone from standing outside institutional
processes in order to judge them, to taking up a position within
institutional processes of risk management – to be just another cog in
the machine.
What (conscious and unconscious) pressures drove Shihata’s successors
to prefer relevance to authority? The appointment process, professional
training, and personal ambitions of particular General Counsels no
doubt have a role to play, but perhaps do not tell the whole story.
Teasing out the institutionalization of what was effectively a
self-relegation of an entire Office – and doing so in the teeth of
strongly-felt professional commitments harboured by the lawyers therein –
seems to call an account of those at the sharp end of executive
agendas.
A second set of questions that might be taken up have to do with
possible legal subplots, as it were, in the World Bank’s narrative
weave. Has law migrated to other parts of the institution (to offices
having to do with internal accountability, compliance, integrity and
anti-corruption, for instance)? Have legal functions been outsourced?
Are lawyers or law graduates at work in other offices? Are people
untrained in legal studies doing work we might recognise as being legal
in form or substance? If we don’t recognise their work as such, it seems
appropriate at least to ask ‘why not?’. The answers to such questions, I
suspect, would enrich and complexify the texture of a socio-legal
inquiry into the place of law in the World Bank. Law’s precariousness is
intimately linked to the anxiety of (ir)relevance. The World Bank’s Lawyers
shows how General Counsels traded institutional authority for
institutional relevance. In a dynamic institutional context – and every
institution pretends to dynamism these days – relevance can only be
assured by adaptability. This ‘ever-shifting’ characteristic of law is
the flipside of law’s institutional precariousness.
Ever-Shifting Modes of Existence
Van Den Meerssche’s observation that law changes its form is important. Too often, as I have argued elsewhere,
international lawyers rush to see law in the lawishness of global
governance. It is reassuring to think that one has encountered nothing
more disturbing than old wine in new bottles – not least because it
ensures our discipline’s own continued relevance. If law shifts its
modes of existence how do we know law when we see it?
This tiresome question is, of course, another variation on the ‘what
is law?’ theme introduced earlier in this review. The response ‘law is
what lawyers do’ is unsatisfying; especially when lawyers end up doing
things that do not readily fit the description of legal practice – like
risk management, for instance. The assumption that ‘where there are
lawyers, so there is law’ begs questions about what it is actually is
that the lawyers are doing. As to this second concern, Van Den
Meerssche is a victim of his own success. His excellent descriptions of
attempts to ‘mainstream’ executive policy changes provoked all sorts of
productive associations and questions.
One set of questions had to do with the coalface of lawyerly
practice. I found it hard to imagine it looks like when a lawyer takes
part in risk management processes. Do lawyers do risk management
differently to other professions? Do they work in tandem with, or
separately from, other agencies in the Bank? Does risk management occur
only at the level of projects, or also at the level of programming and
policy? Were particular technologies of risk management developed
(matrices, indices, reporting tools, dashboards, pro forma documents of
any kind)? Did such technologies have to be translated into a legal
idiom in order for lawyers to use them? Were existing lawyers enrolled
in the new practices of lawyering or did the change in policy provoke a
change in personnel?
It seems to me that answers to these questions might bring into focus
both fluctuations law’s modalities and identity, and Van Den
Meerssche’s concern with law’s ‘institutional glue’ role within the
World Bank. For instance, the professional risk-adversity of traditional
lawyering might be a boon if lawyers had the role of identifying risks
to be mitigated by others. If lawyers were meant to mitigate risks, then
a more problem-solving frame of mind might be wanted. Legal expertise
in the operation of criminal justice or investment law may well offer
solutions to such questions. However, if law is just one expertise among
many, then can it retain its institutional adhesiveness? Law is the
object of enrolment and translation here; it is no longer the enrolling
and translating subject of Shihata’s tenure.
Thinking about the nuts and bolts of what lawyers do makes me wonder
about the size of the shift from juridical to managerial modes of legal
practice. Reflecting on my own teaching practice, it strikes me that
lawyers are no strangers to problem-solving. Getting one’s client, the
best possible outcome demands that lawyers not only instrumentalize
legal rules and processes but also that they give their clients a sense
of the riskiness of a given course of action. I wondered, in short, to
what extent traditional juridical models of legal practice contain the
seeds of their own transformation into managerial ones.
Conclusion
Acknowledging the difficulty of knowing law when we see it seems a
particularly important concession for scholars of international
organizations to accept. For many years, framing one’s research around
international organizations like the UN or the World Bank has been a way
to keep the ‘what is law?’ question at bay. Van Den Meerssche’s study
is a timely caution to those who see law everywhere they look and who,
recognising lawishness, interpolate juridical forms into their field of
vision. The World Bank’s Lawyers
reminds us lawyers to be less sure of ourselves. The book invites more
empirical research into international organizations like the World Bank –
and demands that such work be done on terms that do not already assume
that law’s place is assured and stable. As such, its value to the legal
literature on international organizations cannot be overstated.
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