European University Institute Library

International judicial review, when should international courts intervene?, Shai Dothan

Label
International judicial review, when should international courts intervene?, Shai Dothan
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
International judicial review
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1119125733
Responsibility statement
Shai Dothan
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooksStudies on international courts and tribunals
Sub title
when should international courts intervene?
Summary
This book is motivated by a question: when should international courts intervene in domestic affairs? To answer this question thoroughly, the book is broken down into a series of separate inquiries: when is intervention legitimate? When can international courts identify good legal solutions? When will intervention initiate useful processes? When will it lead to good outcomes? These inquiries are answered based on reviewing judgments of international courts, strategic analysis, and empirical findings. The book outlines under which conditions intervention by international courts is recommended and evaluates the implications that international courts have on society
Table Of Contents
1. Introduction -- 2. The argument from normative legitimacy -- 3. The argument from systemic epistemic superiority -- 4. Why international courts improve -- 5. Who should participate in the courts' proceedings? -- 6. Creating the right incentives -- 7. Conclusions
Content
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