helped usher in this less power-based, less formalist account of international legal mechanisms.
Koh’s subsequent study of transnational legal process kept the emphasis on
processes of norm articulation and decisionmaking, but wedded this processbased
analysis to a Cover-like embrace of the potentially jurisgenerative
power of international and transnational legal norms. Cover had defined
jurisgenerative processes as those in which interpretive “communities do
create law and do give meaning to law through their narratives and
precepts.” 49 Koh invoked this jurisgenerative role of international and
transnational law in multiple articles. First, in a 1994 lecture, Koh argued that
the interaction among multiple transnational actors was