The shifting allocation of authority in international law : considering sovereignty, supremacy and subsidiarity ; essays in honour of Professor Ruth Lapidoth / / edited by Tomer Broude and Yuval Shany.
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Superior document: | Studies in international law (Oxford, England) ; . 19 |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Year of Publication: | 2008 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Studies in international law (Oxford, England) ;
v. 19. |
Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | viii, 437 p. |
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Table of Contents:
- pt.1. The structures of international law
- The centipede and the centrifuge: principles for the centralisation and decentralisation of governance
- On the causes of uncertainty and volatility in international law
- Structural paradigms of international law
- Subsidiarity as a method of policy centralisation
- Fragmentation(s) of international law: on normative integration as authority allocation.
- pt.2. International authority and the state
- State sovereignty, international legality and moral disagreement
- Democracy without sovereignty: the global vocation of political ethics
- Subsidiarity, fragmentation and democracy: towards the demise of general international law?
- pt.3. Allocation of authority among judicial bodies
- Towards a Solange-method between international courts and tribunals?
- Exercise in constitutional tolerance? When public international law meets private international law: Bosphorus revisited
- Domestic courts and sovereignty.
- pt.4. Allocations of authority in specific normative contexts
- Regionalism, economic interdependence, approximation of laws and their impact on sovereignty, national identity, and legitimacy: the Euro-Med case
- Conflicting obligations in international investment law: investment tribunals' perspective
- Multi-level accountability: a case study of accountability in the aftermath of the Srebenica massacre
- Territorial administration by non-territorial sovereigns.