This article summarizes insights from political science and empirical legal scholarship concerning selection and appointment of adjudicators to permanent international courts (ICs). This scholarship suggests that designers of ICs face challenging trade-offs in balancing judicial independence and accountability, as well as in promoting descriptive representation and necessary qualifications on the bench. The article considers different institutional design features related to appointment procedures: representation, reappointment, screening procedures and procedures for removing judges. Representation is discussed in a series of sections considering full or selective representation, voting rules and geographic and gender quotas and aspiration...
This chapter is part of an upcoming interdisciplinary volume on international law and politics. The ...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
The book chapter discusses the appropriate types of expertise that should be available in the compos...
This paper summarizes insights from political science and empirical legal scholarship concerning sel...
This article summarizes insights from political science and empirical legal scholarship concerning s...
Stiansen’s work was supported by the Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence fu...
This Article evaluates what we know about the politics of international judicial appointments and id...
Judges of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) are prominent jurists of high merit. However, lit...
The phenomenon of judicial self-government at international courts has thus far been vastly understu...
Over the last several years, judicial appointment procedures in the United States have become increa...
This article assesses recent reforms of the appointment procedure for members of the Court of Justic...
The Article shows that women are found in dramatically low numbers on the benches of the majority of...
This article identifies trends relating to the selection of the Court as a forum for contentious and...
Until relatively recently, judicial selection did not stir up much interest outside the United State...
Our project is an interdisciplinary one, engaging the theoretical and empirical concerns of both pol...
This chapter is part of an upcoming interdisciplinary volume on international law and politics. The ...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
The book chapter discusses the appropriate types of expertise that should be available in the compos...
This paper summarizes insights from political science and empirical legal scholarship concerning sel...
This article summarizes insights from political science and empirical legal scholarship concerning s...
Stiansen’s work was supported by the Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence fu...
This Article evaluates what we know about the politics of international judicial appointments and id...
Judges of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) are prominent jurists of high merit. However, lit...
The phenomenon of judicial self-government at international courts has thus far been vastly understu...
Over the last several years, judicial appointment procedures in the United States have become increa...
This article assesses recent reforms of the appointment procedure for members of the Court of Justic...
The Article shows that women are found in dramatically low numbers on the benches of the majority of...
This article identifies trends relating to the selection of the Court as a forum for contentious and...
Until relatively recently, judicial selection did not stir up much interest outside the United State...
Our project is an interdisciplinary one, engaging the theoretical and empirical concerns of both pol...
This chapter is part of an upcoming interdisciplinary volume on international law and politics. The ...
Roughly 90% of all international judicial decisions have been issued after 1990. The increasing acti...
The book chapter discusses the appropriate types of expertise that should be available in the compos...