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International courts and tribunals play significant roles in international law and global governance, but their procedures and the outcomes they produce vary significantly. The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals presents the concept of performance and interdisciplinary accounts to describe and explain this variation.
List of contents
Introduction; 1. A framework for evaluating the performance of international courts and tribunals Theresa Squatrito, Oran R. Young, Andreas Føllesdal and Geir Ulfstein; Part I: 2. Court performance within the multilateral trade regime Cosette D. Creamer and Anton Strezhnev; 3. The performance of investment treaty arbitration Daniel Behn; 4. Performance of regional human rights courts Dinah Shelton; 5. Performance of international criminal courts and tribunals Nobuo Hayashi; Part II: 6. Assessing the international criminal court Hyeran Jo, Mitchell Radtke and Beth A. Simmons; 7. How the fragmentation of the international judiciary affects the performance of international judicial bodies Benjamin Faude; 8. International judicial performances and the performance of international courts Jeffrey L. Dunoff and Mark A. Pollack; 9. International courts' socialization strategies for actual and perceived performance Nicole De Silva; 10. What happens after a judgment is given? Judgment compliance and the performance of international courts and tribunals Chiara Giorgetti; 11. Problem-solving structure and international courts and tribunals: lessons from the study of international regimes Steinar Andresen; Part III: 12. Measurement and methods: opportunities for future research Theresa Squatrito; 13. What we know so far Oran R. Young, Theresa Squatrito, Andreas Føllesdal and Geir Ulfstein.
About the author
Theresa Squatrito is a lecturer in the Department of Politics at the University of Liverpool.Oran R. Young is Professor Emeritus at the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara.Andreas Follesdal is a Professor of Philosophy at Universitetet i Oslo.Geir Ulfstein is Professor of Law at Universitetet i Oslo.
Summary
International courts and tribunals play significant roles in international law and global governance, but their procedures and the outcomes they produce vary significantly. The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals presents the concept of performance and interdisciplinary accounts to describe and explain this variation.