Fr. 196.00

International Courts Versus Non-Compliance Mechanisms - Comparative Advantages in Strengthening Treaty Implementation

English · Hardback

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"The effective implementation of treaties is essential. This book examines the advantages of non-compliance mechanisms (NCMs) versus that of international courts and tribunals to support treaty fulfilment. It brings together globally-recognised names in international law, human rights law, environmental and climate change law, and trade law"--

List of contents










Introduction; 1. Non-compliance mechanisms or international courts: how to increase treaty compliance? Foster Caroline and Voigt Christina; Part I. General and Conceptual Issues: 2. Lessons from the Paris agreement for international pandemic law and beyond Foster Caroline; 3. The new generation of environmental non-compliance procedures and the question of legitimacy Fitzmaurice Malgosia; 4. International courts v. compliance mechanisms through the lens of Gabcikovo-Nagymaros and Bystroe canal cases Pineschi Laura; Part II. Specific Procedures: 5. The advisory procedure in non-compliance procedures: lessons from the UNECE water convention Cruz Carrillo Carlos; 6. State-to-state procedures before compliance committees: still alive? Bendel Justine and Suedi Yusra; 7. Compliance with science-based treaties Das Rukmini; Part III. Trade, Finance and Investment: 8. Trade's enforcement conundrum Claussen Kathleen; 9. How should the world bank's dispute resolution services benefit affected persons and borrower states? Brosseau Jonathan; 10. IMF surveillance as a non-compliance mechanism Fahrner Ambroise; Part IV. Environment: 11. Legal mobilisation for biodiversity protection: assessing the complementary potential of the Bern's case file system and the European commission's infringement procedure Evangelidis Elena; 12. The right to a healthy environment in Latin America and the Caribbean: compliance through the Inter-American system and the Escazú agreement Tigre Maria Antonia; Part V. Human Rights: 13. Institutional overlap and comparative effectiveness: compliance with torture-related decisions of the European court of human rights, the human rights committee and the committee against torture in Europe von Staden Andreas; 14. The UK's compliance with the ICCPR and ECHR: a tale of two treaties White Samuel; 15. Exploring the role of decisions by judicial, quasi-judicial and specialised non-judicial bodies in advancing anti-trafficking efforts Magugliani Noemi and Gauci Jean-Pierre; 16. UN human rights treaty bodies' contribution to compliance with international environmental law: the growing importance of human rights treaty bodies in environmental dispute resolution Solntsev Alexander; Part VI. Criminal Law and Law of Disarmament: 17. Monitoring compliance in international criminal law Borlini Leonardo; 18. Non-compliance and nuclear disarmament - the Iran nuclear deal Sun Jin; Part VII. Cultural Heritage Law and Law of the Sea: 19. Protecting cultural heritage during military action: enforcing compliance with the 1954 Hague Convention in the case of the temple Preah Vihear Fabris Alice; 20. The South China sea arbitration - navigating compliance strategies through the lens of Raya and the last Dragon Mary Jude Cantorias Marvel; Index.

About the author

Christina Voigt is Professor of Law at the University of Oslo and Coordinator at Pluricourts – Center of Excellence, Chair of the IUCN World Commission on Environmental Law and Co-chair of the Paris Agreement Implementation and Compliance Committee. She is a renowned expert in international environmental law and has taught and published widely in this field. She is the editor of, inter alia, International Judicial Practice on the Environment – Questions of Legitimacy (Cambridge, 2019).Caroline Foster is Professor of Law at the University of Auckland and Director of the New Zealand Centre for Environmental Law (NZCEL). She is the author of Global Regulatory Standards in Environmental and Health Disputes: Global Regulatory Standards in Environmental and Health Disputes (2021) and Science and the Precautionary Principle in International Courts and Tribunals: Expert Evidence, Burden of Proof and Finality (Cambridge, 2011).

Summary

The effective implementation of treaties is essential. This book examines the advantages of non-compliance mechanisms (NCMs) versus that of international courts and tribunals to support treaty fulfilment. It brings together globally-recognised names in international law, human rights law, environmental and climate change law, and trade law.

Foreword

Non-compliance mechanisms are more important than ever for helping ensure the effective implementation of treaties, now and into the future.

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