Secondary Rules of Primary Importance in International Law
Secondary Rules of Primary Importance in International Law
Attribution, Causality, Evidence, and Standards of Review in the Practice of International Courts and Tribunals
Milanovic, Marko; Cali, Basak; Kajtar, Gabor
Oxford University Press
11/2022
368
Dura
Inglês
9780192869012
15 a 20 dias
712
Part 1 - Standard of Review in International Law
2: Eyal Benvenisti: Explaining Variations in Standards of Review in International Adjudication
3: Vladyslav Lanovoy: Standards of Review in the Practice of International Courts and Tribunals
4: Lukasz Gruszczynski: Saving Regulatory Space for States through the Standard of Review: A Case Study of Tobacco control-related International Disputes
5: Katalin Sulyok: Science, Legitimacy, and the Judicial Function: A Need for More Intrusive Standards of Review
Part 2 - Causation in International Law
6: Alice Ollino: A Missed Secondary Rulea Causation in the Breach of Preventive and Due Diligence Obligations?
7: Martin Jarrett: Depolluting the Doctrine on Causation in International Investment Law: The Case for Extracting Legal Causation
8: Catherine E. Gascoigne: A Priori Causal Inferences in the Law of the World Trade Organization
Part 3 - Evidentiary rules in International Law
9: Tilmann Altwicker and Alexandra Ellen Hansen: Presumptions as Secondary Rules in the Judicial Interpretation of International Human Rights
10: Basak Cali: Proving Bad Faith in International Law: Lessons from the Article 18 Case law of the European Court of Human Rights
11: Christopher Lentz: The Evidentiary Implications of a Party s Non-Participation in the Proceedings
Part 4 - Attribution in International Law
12: Marko Milanovic: State Acquiescence or Connivance in the Wrongful Conduct of Third Parties in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
13: Christina Binder and Stephan Wittich: A Comparison of the Rules of Attribution in the Law of State Responsibility, State Immunity, and Custom
14: Jure Zrilic: Untangling the Relationship between Attribution and Due Diligence in Investment Law and Beyond
15: Gabor Kajtar: Fragmentation of Attribution in International Law
Part 1 - Standard of Review in International Law
2: Eyal Benvenisti: Explaining Variations in Standards of Review in International Adjudication
3: Vladyslav Lanovoy: Standards of Review in the Practice of International Courts and Tribunals
4: Lukasz Gruszczynski: Saving Regulatory Space for States through the Standard of Review: A Case Study of Tobacco control-related International Disputes
5: Katalin Sulyok: Science, Legitimacy, and the Judicial Function: A Need for More Intrusive Standards of Review
Part 2 - Causation in International Law
6: Alice Ollino: A Missed Secondary Rulea Causation in the Breach of Preventive and Due Diligence Obligations?
7: Martin Jarrett: Depolluting the Doctrine on Causation in International Investment Law: The Case for Extracting Legal Causation
8: Catherine E. Gascoigne: A Priori Causal Inferences in the Law of the World Trade Organization
Part 3 - Evidentiary rules in International Law
9: Tilmann Altwicker and Alexandra Ellen Hansen: Presumptions as Secondary Rules in the Judicial Interpretation of International Human Rights
10: Basak Cali: Proving Bad Faith in International Law: Lessons from the Article 18 Case law of the European Court of Human Rights
11: Christopher Lentz: The Evidentiary Implications of a Party s Non-Participation in the Proceedings
Part 4 - Attribution in International Law
12: Marko Milanovic: State Acquiescence or Connivance in the Wrongful Conduct of Third Parties in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
13: Christina Binder and Stephan Wittich: A Comparison of the Rules of Attribution in the Law of State Responsibility, State Immunity, and Custom
14: Jure Zrilic: Untangling the Relationship between Attribution and Due Diligence in Investment Law and Beyond
15: Gabor Kajtar: Fragmentation of Attribution in International Law