International judicial integration and fragmentation

Bibliographic Details
Published:Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press, 2013
Persons: Webb, Philippa -
Format: Book / Printed Book / Thesis
Language:English
Edition:1. ed
Series:International courts and tribunals series
Subjects:
Physical description:XXV, 253 S.
Item Description:
Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
ISBN:9780198743729
9780199671151
record_format marc
spelling Webb, Philippa
International judicial integration and fragmentation
by Philippa Webb
1. ed
Oxford
Oxford Univ. Press
2013, 2013
XXV, 253 S.
24 cm
Teilw. zugl.: New Haven., Conn., Yale School of Law., Diss., 2011
International law
International courts / Rules and practice
Genocide (International law)
Violence (Law)
Privileges and immunities
Hochschulschrift
International courts and tribunals series
Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
Online-Ausg. u.d.T.: Webb, Philippa: International judicial integration and fragmentation
Webb, Philippa Mahal
http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz381918920inh.pdf
ToC
Völkerrecht Heidelberg
VIEW
language English
format 0/Buch/
1/Buch/PrintBuch/
0/Hochschulschrift/
author Webb, Philippa
spellingShingle Webb, Philippa
International judicial integration and fragmentation
International courts and tribunals series
author_facet Webb, Philippa
Webb, Philippa
author_role -
author_sort Webb, Philippa
author2 Webb, Philippa
author2_role -
title International judicial integration and fragmentation
title_short International judicial integration and fragmentation
title_full International judicial integration and fragmentation by Philippa Webb
title_fullStr International judicial integration and fragmentation by Philippa Webb
title_full_unstemmed International judicial integration and fragmentation by Philippa Webb
title_sort international judicial integration and fragmentation by philippa webb
series International courts and tribunals series
publisher Oxford Univ. Press
publishDate 2013
physical XXV, 253 S. 24 cm
edition 1. ed
isbn 9780198743729
9780199671151
callnumber-first VR VIII Be 7
callnumber-subject VR
callnumber-label VR VIII BE 7
callnumber-raw VR: VIII BE
VR 29.1
callnumber-search VR: VIII BE
VR 29.1
VR VIII Be 7
callnumber-sort VR 229.1
genre Hochschulschrift
genre_facet Hochschulschrift
url http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz381918920inh.pdf
illustrated Not Illustrated
institution Local holdings
institution_hierarchy 0/Local holdings/
system_id 000908998
online false
dedup_id_str WebbPhilippaInternationaljudicialintegrationandfragmentationOxfordUnivPress
toc_content IMAGE 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CASES XV TABLE OF TREATIES, LEGISLATION, AND OTHER LEGAL INSTRUMENTS XXIII LIST OF ACRONYMS XXVII 1. INTRODUCTION 1 I. JUDICIAL DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE GROWTH OF INTERNATIONAL COURTS 1 II. INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION IN THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM 4 III. METHODOLOGY 10 IV. STRUCTURE 13 2. GENOCIDE 14 I. INTRODUCTION 14 II. THE CONTEXT IN WHICH THE LAW ON GENOCIDE IS BEING ADJ UDICATED 16 A. TWO REGIMES FOR RESPONSIBILITY 16 B. MULTIPLE SYSTEMS FOR ENFORCEMENT 21 III. THE REQUIRED INTENT 24 IV. OTHER ASPECTS OF ARTICLE II OF THE CONVENTION 35 A. NATURE OF THE PROTECTED GROUP 36 B. NATURE OF THE DESTRUCTION 40 C. IN WHOLE OR IN PART 46 V. INTERPLAY BETWEEN STATE RESPONSIBILITY FOR GENOCIDE AND INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 50 A. PREREQUISITES FOR HOLDING STATES AND INDIVIDUALS RESPONSIBLE 50 B. STATE AND INDIVIDUAL COMPLICITY IN GENOCIDE 52 C. REMEDIES AND THE OBLIGATIONS TO PREVENT AND PUNISH 56 VI. CONCLUSION 59 3. IMMUNITIES 62 I. INTRODUCTION 62
local_classification VR: VIII Be VR 29.1
id 000927409
work_keys_str_mv AT webbphilippa internationaljudicialintegrationandfragmentation
first_indexed 2024-05-05T23:40:53Z
last_indexed 2024-05-05T23:40:53Z
_version_ 1800640162866135040
fullrecord 05402nam 2200517 ub4500001001200000003002700012008003900039007002400078020002200102020003800124020001500162020001500177090001700192100001900209245007500228250001100303260004300314300002300357502007000380653002200450653004600472653003300518653001900551653003000570655002100600041001900621993000900640993000800649993001100657490004600668500006000714775009400774024001800868024001800886084001600904084001200920998001600932998002000948998001600968696002500984856008501009992197401094992169303068852002504761999009804786VR000927409VRH01000000000000000908998t s2013 rm ||| engtu||||||||||||||||||||| a978-0-19-874372-9 a978-0-19-967115-1c(hbk.) £70.00 a0198743726 a019967115X aVR VIII Be 71 aWebb, Philippa00aInternational judicial integration and fragmentationcby Philippa Webb a1. ed. aOxfordbOxford Univ. Pressc2013, 2013 aXXV, 253 S.c24 cm aTeilw. zugl.: New Haven., Conn., Yale School of Law., Diss., 2011 aInternational law aInternational courts / Rules and practice aGenocide (International law) aViolence (Law) aPrivileges and immunities aHochschulschrift07aeng2ISO 639-2 a1308 aToC a1307bb0 aInternational courts and tribunals series aHier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke tOnline-Ausg. u.d.T.: Webb, Philippa: International judicial integration and fragmentation8 a97801996711513 a9780199671151 aVR: VIII Be aVR 29.1 aVR: VIII Be aRechtsprechung. aVR: VIII Be aWebb, Philippa Mahal uhttp://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz381918920inh.pdf3ToCmVölkerrecht HeidelbergzVIEW aIMAGE 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CASES XV TABLE OF TREATIES, LEGISLATION, AND OTHER LEGAL INSTRUMENTS XXIII LIST OF ACRONYMS XXVII 1. INTRODUCTION 1 I. JUDICIAL DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE GROWTH OF INTERNATIONAL COURTS 1 II. INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION IN THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM 4 III. METHODOLOGY 10 IV. STRUCTURE 13 2. GENOCIDE 14 I. INTRODUCTION 14 II. THE CONTEXT IN WHICH THE LAW ON GENOCIDE IS BEING ADJ UDICATED 16 A. TWO REGIMES FOR RESPONSIBILITY 16 B. MULTIPLE SYSTEMS FOR ENFORCEMENT 21 III. THE REQUIRED INTENT 24 IV. OTHER ASPECTS OF ARTICLE II OF THE CONVENTION 35 A. NATURE OF THE PROTECTED GROUP 36 B. NATURE OF THE DESTRUCTION 40 C. IN WHOLE OR IN PART 46 V. INTERPLAY BETWEEN STATE RESPONSIBILITY FOR GENOCIDE AND INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 50 A. PREREQUISITES FOR HOLDING STATES AND INDIVIDUALS RESPONSIBLE 50 B. STATE AND INDIVIDUAL COMPLICITY IN GENOCIDE 52 C. REMEDIES AND THE OBLIGATIONS TO PREVENT AND PUNISH 56 VI. CONCLUSION 59 3. IMMUNITIES 62 I. INTRODUCTION 62 II. THE CONTEXT IN WHICH IMMUNITY ISSUES ARE BEING ADJUDICATED 65 A. EXPANDING NATIONAL JURISDICTION 65 B. EFFORTS TO REMOVE IMMUNITY 68 III. IMMUNITY RATIONEPERSONAE 72 A. WHO DOES IT APPLY TO? 73 B. WHICH ACTS ARE COVERED? 75 C. ANY EXCEPTION FOR INTERNATIONAL CRIMES? 76 IMAGE 2 XII TABLE OF CONTENTS IV. IMMUNITY RATIONE MATERIAE A. WHO DOES IT APPLY TO? B. WHICH ACTS ARE COVERED? C. ANY EXCEPTION FOR INTERNATIONAL CRIMES? V. STATE IMMUNITY A. ACTAJURE IMPERIL AND ACTAJUREGESTIONIS B. ANY EXCEPTION FOR VIOLATIONS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW? VI. CONCLUSION 4. USE OF FORCE I. INTRODUCTION II. THREAT OR USE OF FORCE A. DEFINITION OF THREAT OF FORCE B. DEFINITION OF USE OF FORCE C. USE OFFEREE AND TITLE TO TERRITORY III. 'ARMED ATTACK' FOR THE PURPOSE OF SELF-DEFENCE A. IDENTITY OF THE ATTACKER B. DEGREE OF GRAVITY C. ANTICIPATORY SELF-DEFENCE IV. THE CRIME OF AGGRESSION A. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE CRIME OF AGGRESSION IN INTERNATIONAL COURTS aB. BRINGING THE CRIME OF AGGRESSION WITHIN THE JURISDICTION OF THE ICC C. THE RELATIONSHIP WITH THE SECURITY COUNCIL D. SCENARIOS OF FRAGMENTATION AND INTEGRATION 1. ICC-SECURITY COUNCIL 2. ICC-ICJ V. CONSEQUENCES OF A FINDING OF A USE OF FORCE A. CLASSIFICATION OF THE ARMED CONFLICT B. INTERNATIONALIZATION OF CONFLICTS AND ATTRIBUTION OF RESPONSIBILITY VI. CONCLUSION 5 . EXPLAINING JUDICIAL INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION I. INTRODUCTION II. HOW THE IDENTITY OF THE COURT AFFECTS INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION A. PERMANENT VS AD HOC B. FUNCTION C. INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT 81 82 83 87 91 92 94 100 103 103 106 106 109 111 113 115 117 120 122 122 125 127 130 130 131 134 134 137 140 145 145 147 147 153 159 IMAGE 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS XIII III. HOW THE SUBSTANCE OF THE LAW AFFECTS INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION 171 A. TREATY OR CUSTOM 171 B. LEVEL OF DEVELOPMENT 177 C. LEVEL OF CONTROVERSY AND CHANGE 179 IV. HOW THE PROCEDURE OF THE COURT AFFECTS INTEGRATION AND FRAGMENTATION 184 A. FACT-FINDING AND EVIDENCE 184 B. DRAFTING AND REASONING PROCESS 190 C. PRECEDENT AND DIALOGUE 194 V. CONCLUSION 201 6. CONCLUSION 203 I. INTRODUCTION 203 II. THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW BY INTERNATIONAL COURTS 204 III. MODELS FOR ENHANCING JUDICIAL INTEGRATION 209 A. MAXIMAL MODELS: IMPOSING A HIERARCHY ON THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM 210 B. INTERMEDIATE MODELS: BORROWING FROM OTHER REGIMES 214 C. MINIMAL MODELS: DIALOGUE, ICJ LEADERSHIP, AND INFORMAL JUDICIAL NETWORKS 219 D. A MODIFIED MINIMAL MODEL: STRUCTURED DIALOGUE, ICJ PROMINENCE, AND INVOLVEMENT OF OTHER ACTORS IN ESTABLISHING SYSTEMATIC LEGAL NORMS 221 IV. CONCLUSION 227 BIBLIOGRAPHY 229 INDEX 249 cVR: VIII Be: 7mBOOK aVRH50bMPVRHcInstitutsbibliothekdVR: VIII Be: 7eavailabletVerfügbarf1g0hNi18jBIBki