Common Law of International Adjudication

Subjects:
Arbitration and Dispute Resolution
Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgments
Table of Contents
Table of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. A Common Law of International Adjudication: Background and Scope
2. The Powers of International Courts Relating to Procedure and Remedies
3. Aspects of Evidence in International Adjudication
4. Power of International Courts to Grant Provisional Measures
5. Power of International Courts to Interpret and Revise Judgments and Awards
6. Remedies in International Adjudication
7. A Common Law of International Adjudication: Reasons and Implications
Conclusion
Bibliography
Table of Cases
Table of International Instruments

ISBN13: 9780199563906
ISBN: 019956390X
To be Published: February 2009
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Paperback
Price: £29.99 - Not Yet Published

Recent years have seen a proliferation of international courts and tribunals, which has given rise to several new issues affecting the administration of international justice. This book makes a signification contribution to understanding the impact of this proliferation by addressing one important question: namely, whether international courts and tribunals are increasingly adopting common approaches to issues of procedure and remedies. This book's central argument is that there is an increasing commonality in the practice of international courts to the application of rules concerning these issues, and that this represents the emergence of a common law of international adjudication.

This book examines this question by considering several key issues relating to procedure and remedies, and analyses relevant international jurisprudence to demonstrate that there is susbstantial commonality. It goes on to look at why international courts are increasingly adopting common approaches to such questions, and why a greater degree of commonality may be found with respect to some issues rather than others. In doing so, light is shed on the methods adopted by international courts to engage in the cross-fertilization of legal principles.

The emergence of a common law of international adjudication has important practical and theoretical implications, as it suggests that international courts can also devise common approaches to the challenges that they face in the age of proliferation. It also suggests that international courts do not generally operate as self-contained regimes, but rather that they regard themselves as forming part of a community of international courts, therefore having positive implications for the development of an truly international legal system.