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Informationen zum Autor Marlene Wind is Professor and Director for the Centre for European Politics (CEP) at the Department of Political Science and Professor at iCourts (Centre of Excellence for International Courts) at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. Klappentext Explores how and why the rise in international courts impacts on domestic politics on both national and international levels. Zusammenfassung A genuinely interdisciplinary analysis of international law and courts. By employing social science methodology combined with classical case studies! this volume moves the study of international law to a new level! demonstrating the need to adopt a broader outlook drawing on empirical legal research. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Marlene Wind; 1. Missing in action? The rare voice of international courts in domestic politics Lisa Conant; Part I: 2. What can financial markets tell us about international courts and deterrence? Krzysztof Pelc and Jeffrey Kucik; 3. The Strasbourg Court and domestic judicial politics David Kosar; 4. It's a good idea ... isn't it? The impact of complementarity at the international criminal court on domestic law, politics and perceptions of sovereignty Steven Freeland; 5. Rights-protecting iCourts: the curious case of the OP-ICESCR Benjamin Perryman; 6. Re-assembling the French state via human rights: between human rights internationalism and political sovereignism Mikael Rask Madsen; 7. Impact through trust: the CJEU as a trust-enhancing institution Juan A. Mayoral; Part II: 8. Ideology and international human rights commitments in post-communist regimes: the cases of the Czech Republic and Slovakia Katarína Šipulová, Jozef Janovský and Hubert Smekal; 9. Escalation and interaction: international courts and domestic politics in the law of state immunity Philippa Webb; 10. National parliaments: obstacles or aid to the impact of international human rights bodies? Jasper Krommendijk; 11. The European Court of Human Rights and Swiss politics: how does the Swiss judge fit in? Odile Ammann; 12. The use of international jurisprudence by Israel's Supreme Court Yaël Ronen; 13. Laggards or pioneers? When Scandinavian avant-garde judges don't cite international case law: a methodological framework Marlene Wind....