The paper starts with the effects of international courts on the broader public and narrows down to their influence on a small elite of lawyers. Part I suggests that international courts captivate the public imagination, allowing citizens to articulate their rights. Part II demonstrates how governments, parliaments, and national courts around the world interact with international courts in ways that improve public deliberation. Part III studies the global elite of lawyers that work in conjunction with international courts to shape policy. Part IV concludes by arguing that the dialogue fostered between international courts and democratic bodies does, in fact, lead to more vibrant democratic deliberation
Reviewing Karen J. Alter, The New Terrain of International law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton ...
The thesis is concerned with the role and position of domestic courts in the international legal ord...
In recent decades, international courts have proliferated the international systemâa trend often ref...
The paper starts with the effects of international courts on the broader public and narrows down to ...
How should we evaluate international courts in terms of their effect on democratic deficits in inter...
The heightened activities of international organizations and national governments have pertained bot...
In a post-Cold War era characterised by globalisation and deep interdependence, the actions of natio...
Courts are known to be political actors. National courts play the political game in the national dom...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
There are two significant trends in how domestic courts applying international law: (i) they are exp...
This paper utilizes “practice theory” to identify and analyze the everyday practices of internationa...
This lecture was delivered at the European Society of International Law’s annual conference, which w...
Domestic court decisions often make headlines around the world. For example, recent U.S. Supreme Cou...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
In this Master’s thesis, “International Courts: Challenges New and Old - A Deconstruction on the Wor...
Reviewing Karen J. Alter, The New Terrain of International law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton ...
The thesis is concerned with the role and position of domestic courts in the international legal ord...
In recent decades, international courts have proliferated the international systemâa trend often ref...
The paper starts with the effects of international courts on the broader public and narrows down to ...
How should we evaluate international courts in terms of their effect on democratic deficits in inter...
The heightened activities of international organizations and national governments have pertained bot...
In a post-Cold War era characterised by globalisation and deep interdependence, the actions of natio...
Courts are known to be political actors. National courts play the political game in the national dom...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
There are two significant trends in how domestic courts applying international law: (i) they are exp...
This paper utilizes “practice theory” to identify and analyze the everyday practices of internationa...
This lecture was delivered at the European Society of International Law’s annual conference, which w...
Domestic court decisions often make headlines around the world. For example, recent U.S. Supreme Cou...
Court judgments are epitomes of sovereign rule in many grand theoretical sketches. How may such judi...
In this Master’s thesis, “International Courts: Challenges New and Old - A Deconstruction on the Wor...
Reviewing Karen J. Alter, The New Terrain of International law: Courts, Politics, Rights (Princeton ...
The thesis is concerned with the role and position of domestic courts in the international legal ord...
In recent decades, international courts have proliferated the international systemâa trend often ref...