Jessie Hohmann and Daniel Joyce (eds) * Graph: S1816383120000144 fig1.png What can armed drones, opium, whales, manganese nodules and railway clocks tell us about the production of international law? They explore the way international law produces objects through processes of codification and standardization, and how international law is produced by objects in return, as evidenced by the chapters on the I déchiqueteuse i (paper shredder) and the gavel, among others. Given the nature of the collection, it is unsurprising that the book touches on multiple branches of international law, from international environmental law to cultural heritage law, trade law, criminal law and refugee law. [Extracted from the article]