Selecting International Judges

This book PDF is perfect for those who love Law genre, written by Ruth Mackenzie and published by Oxford University Press which was released on 17 June 2010 with total hardcover pages 255. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related Selecting International Judges books below.

Selecting International Judges
Author : Ruth Mackenzie
File Size : 47,7 Mb
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Language : English
Release Date : 17 June 2010
ISBN : 9780199580569
Pages : 255 pages
Get Book

Selecting International Judges by Ruth Mackenzie Book PDF Summary

International courts are called upon to decide upon an increasingly wide range of issues of global importance, yet public knowledge of international judges and the process by which they are appointed remains very limited. Drawing on extensive empirical research, this book explains how the judges who sit on international courts are selected.

Selecting International Judges

International courts are called upon to decide upon an increasingly wide range of issues of global importance, yet public knowledge of international judges and the process by which they are appointed remains very limited. Drawing on extensive empirical research, this book explains how the judges who sit on international courts

Get Book
Selecting International Judges

International courts are called upon to decide upon a wide range of issues of global importance, yet public knowledge of international judges and the process by which they are appointed remains very limited. Drawing on empirical research, this book explains how the judges who sit on international courts are selected.

Get Book
The International Judge

An interdisciplinary introduction to international judges and their work

Get Book
The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication

The post-Cold War proliferation of international adjudicatory bodies and increase in litigation has greatly affected international law and politics. A growing number of international courts and tribunals, exercising jurisdiction over international crimes and sundry international disputes, have become, in some respects, the lynchpin of the international legal system. The Oxford

Get Book
Selecting Europe s Judges

The past decade has witnessed change in the ways judges for the Court of Justice of the European Union and the European Court of Human Rights are selected. The leitmotif has been securing greater professional quality of the judicial candidates, and, for this purpose, both European systems have put in

Get Book
Identity and Diversity on the International Bench

International courts and tribunals hold the power to decide on questions involving sovereignty over territory, grave human rights violations, international crimes, or millions of euros' worth of economic interests. Judges and arbitrators are the 'faces' and arguably the drivers of international adjudication. Yet certain groups tend to be overrepresented on

Get Book
Appointing Judges in an Age of Judicial Power

The main aim of this volume is to analyse common issues arising from increasing judicial power in the context of different political and legal systems, including those in North America, Africa, Europe, Australia, and Asia.

Get Book
International Judicial Practice on the Environment

Evaluates the fundamental legitimacy of judicial practice in the growing number of environmental cases heard before international courts.

Get Book