This chapter argues that the framework chapter’s understanding of de facto authority above all fits the relationship between international courts (ICs) and the parties to a case. Questions arise when it comes to intermediate and extensive audiences. The way in which ICs exercise authority beyond any concrete dispute is, above all, due to the sway they hold over the legal discourse—their semantic authority. ICs have the capacity to establish content-laden reference points for legal discourse that other actors can hardly escape. The chapter also claims that the distinction of authority from persuasion should be maintained as a constitutive feature of both concepts. This is not only in line with a strong tradition of the authority concept, but...
This chapter examines the contribution of international adjudicative bodies to lawmaking. It first d...
This research examines the problem of the authority of the International Criminal Court (ICC), focus...
This contribution presents international judicial institutions as multifunctional actors against the...
This article develops an understanding of authority as the ability to establish content-laden refere...
This article provides a novel and provocative framework to assess the varied authority of internatio...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
This article proposes a theory of legitimacy tailored to international courts and tribunals. In Part...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
"I’ve spoken about authority in the context laid out by Article 38 of the ICJ Statute, that is, wher...
International law claims the authority to guide conduct of states and other actors. This idea, altho...
Without a clear delineation of their competences, the indeterminacy latent in international law open...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
This book tackles an old, but ever relevant question: does international law enjoy legal authority o...
This chapter examines the contribution of international adjudicative bodies to lawmaking. It first d...
This research examines the problem of the authority of the International Criminal Court (ICC), focus...
This contribution presents international judicial institutions as multifunctional actors against the...
This article develops an understanding of authority as the ability to establish content-laden refere...
This article provides a novel and provocative framework to assess the varied authority of internatio...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
This article proposes a theory of legitimacy tailored to international courts and tribunals. In Part...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, this contribution places authority between power and persuasio...
One of the most noted developments in international law over the past twenty years is the proliferat...
"I’ve spoken about authority in the context laid out by Article 38 of the ICJ Statute, that is, wher...
International law claims the authority to guide conduct of states and other actors. This idea, altho...
Without a clear delineation of their competences, the indeterminacy latent in international law open...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
This book tackles an old, but ever relevant question: does international law enjoy legal authority o...
This chapter examines the contribution of international adjudicative bodies to lawmaking. It first d...
This research examines the problem of the authority of the International Criminal Court (ICC), focus...
This contribution presents international judicial institutions as multifunctional actors against the...