Practising Virtue’s contribution to international arbitration scholarship is as titanic as the man it honours: Judge Charles Nelson Brower. The book is an edited collection of 42 chapters authored by many of the world’s leading arbitrators. But Practising Virtue is more than a mere collection of discrete essays on international arbitration. It offers a unique window into the actual practice of international arbitration from the perspective of key players on the ‘inside’. Practising Virtue draws inspiration from Yves Dezalay and Bryant Garth’s seminal 1996 book Dealing in Virtue, which examined the sociological development of a transnational legal order through the work of an elite group of arbitrators. Practising Virtue aims to take Dealing in Virtue ‘a step further’, inviting ‘eminent arbitrators to reflect on the actual practice of international arbitration, and its contribution to the transnational legal system’. Practising Virtue admirably achieves its goal. Its 42 chapters are organized under five broad themes that bring coherence to a vast array of issues over its 749 pages.