
The Making of iCourts
New Interdisciplinary Legal Research- Editors:
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- Publisher:
- 2022
Summary
Die Festschrift ehrt Professor Mikael Rask Madsen anlässlich seiner zehnjährigen Tätigkeit als Forschungsleiter bei iCourts – Centre of Excellence for International Courts – und seines 50. Geburtstags. Die Beiträge behandeln zahlreiche Aspekte des internationalen Rechts und der Gerichtsbarkeit und spiegeln damit die interdisziplinäre und empirische Forschungsagenda des Zentrums wider. Persönliche Berichte jedes einzelnen Forschers mit iCourts (“My iCourts experience”) machen das Umfeld des Zentrums direkt erfahrbar.Mit Beiträgen vonKaren J. Alter, Michael Amiraslani, Başak Çali, Salvatore Caserta, Pola Cebulak, Tom Gerald Daly, Sara Dezalay, Solomon Ebobrah, Maria Elander, Luisa Giannini, Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Laurence R. Helfer, Rachel Hughes, Ron Levi, Henrik Stampe Lund, Claudia Alvarenga Marconi, Juan A. Mayoral, Karen McAuliffe, Jed Odermatt, Henrik Palmer Olsen, Cesare P.R. Romano, Achilles Skordas, Christoph Sperfeldt, Roberto Vilchez Yamato, Ezgi Yildiz, Antoine Vauchez und Micha Wiebusch.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2022
- ISBN-Print
- 978-3-8487-8412-7
- ISBN-Online
- 978-3-7489-2788-4
- Publisher
- Nomos, Baden-Baden
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 632
- Product type
- Edited Book
Table of contents
- Titelei/InhaltsverzeichnisPages 1 - 8 Download chapter (PDF)
- Authors: |Download chapter (PDF)
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- Introduction – iCourts as an international research hubAuthors: |
- IntroductionAuthors: |
- The Landscape is ChangingAuthors: |
- The Blue Sky: Basic Research with a bottom up agendaAuthors: |
- Embracing visitorsAuthors: |
- The pre-history of iCourts:Authors: |
- From Idea to Project: The First contours of iCourtsAuthors: |
- Authors:Download chapter (PDF)
- 1. Classification, Typology and TaxonomyAuthors:
- A. Domain: International Governmental OrganizationsAuthors:
- B. Kingdom: International Rule of Law Bodies and ProceduresAuthors:
- C. Class: Adjudicative MeansAuthors:
- D. Class: Non-Adjudicative MeansAuthors:
- E. Orders of International Courts and Tribunals, Arbitral Tribunals and International Claims and Compensations BodiesAuthors:
- F. Families of International Courts and TribunalsAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- INTRODUCTIONAuthors:
- I. A CONVENTION EUROPE THAT NO LONGER ISAuthors:
- A. FRACTURES AMONGST WESTERN EUROPEAN FOUNDERS: THE UNITED KINGDOM IN THE LEADAuthors:
- B. THE NEW EUROPE: RISE OF REVERSE TRANSITIONS AND ILLIBERAL DEMOCRACIESAuthors:
- II. COPING WITH THE FRACTURED CONVENTION ACQUISAuthors:
- A. LETTING GOOD FAITH INTERPRETERS BEAuthors:
- B. TURN TO BAD FAITH JURISPRUDENCEAuthors:
- III. WHITHER THE VARIABLE GEOMETRY IN THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS SUBSTANTIVE CASE LAW?Authors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- Searching (for) casesAuthors:
- Landmark cases as a genreAuthors:
- The Matthew EffectAuthors:
- EU Law’s Conception of Wealth and WorthAuthors:
- From caseload to case law: the politics of jurisprudenceAuthors:
- Investigating Hermeneutic SpacesAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
- Authors: | |Download chapter (PDF)
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- I. IntroductionAuthors: | |
- II. Prosecutorial discourse as practice: studying repertoires, stability, innovation, and change in international legal fieldsAuthors: | |
- III. Prosecutorial opening statements: legal innovation in unsettled timesAuthors: | |
- IV. The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg: hedging across topics and across timeAuthors: | |
- V. The International Criminal Court: investing in technicality and law as an unhedged betAuthors: | |
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors: | |
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- Judicializing Politics: A Trend (with an End?)Authors: | |
- Scope Conditions for Judicialized PoliticsAuthors: | |
- Phases of Judicialized PoliticsAuthors: | |
- Politics between and across the Four PhasesAuthors: | |
- When Judicialized Politics MatterAuthors: | |
- ConclusionAuthors: | |
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- Our iCourts experienceAuthors: | |
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- I. The AgeAuthors:
- II. Conflicts and Normative ProjectsAuthors:
- III. DestinyAuthors:
- IV. Project 1: Mother EarthAuthors:
- V. Project 2: CosmosAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- ResultsAuthors: | | | |
- Link prediction.Authors: | | | |
- How the model identifies individual cases.Authors: | | | |
- Evolution of feature importances.Authors: | | | |
- Interpreting model errors.Authors: | | | |
- DiscussionAuthors: | | | |
- Importance of understanding empirical patterns of case law usage.Authors: | | | |
- Applications.Authors: | | | |
- Risks and limitations.Authors: | | | |
- Conclusion.Authors: | | | |
- Model.Authors: | | | |
- Predictability.Authors: | | | |
- AcknowledgementsAuthors: | | | |
- Author contributionsAuthors: | | | |
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors: | | | |
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- INTRODUCTIONAuthors:
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- The Need to Consider LanguageAuthors:
- METHODOLOGYAuthors:
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- Linguistic Cultural Compromises in DraftingAuthors:
- Linguistic Cultural Compromises in TranslationAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- 1. IntroductionAuthors: |
- 2. Forms and patterns of resistanceAuthors: |
- 3. The context of resistance against the African CourtAuthors: |
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- 4.1 Resistance and ambivalence reflected in the Court’s designAuthors: |
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- 4.2.1 National governmentsAuthors: |
- 4.2.2 National courtsAuthors: |
- 4.2.3 NGOsAuthors: |
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- 5.1 Overview of the Court’s case-lawAuthors: |
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- 5.2.1 TanzaniaAuthors: |
- 5.2.2 RwandaAuthors: |
- 6 ConclusionAuthors: |
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors: |
- Authors: | |Download chapter (PDF)
- My iCourts experienceAuthors: | |
- Authors: | |Download chapter (PDF)
- IntroductionAuthors: | |
- From international rules to the ruling of the internationalAuthors: | |
- The Al Bashir Case: (re)reading the relationship between the ICC and the UNSCAuthors: | |
- The Al Bashir Case, Sovereign (In)equality, and Ruling through RulesAuthors: | |
- ConclusionAuthors: | |
- Acknowledgments:Authors: | |
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors: | |
- Authors:Download chapter (PDF)
- IntroductionAuthors:
- The European Court of Human Rights and the principle of territorialityAuthors:
- The Court’s view on jurisdiction and extraterritorialityAuthors:
- The spatial control model: effective control over territoryAuthors:
- The personal control model: the state agent authority and controlAuthors:
- The turn to functional jurisdictionAuthors:
- ‘It all makes sense now!’ Jaloud v. the NetherlandsAuthors:
- ConclusionAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- Trust as an alternative for cooperating with the CJEUAuthors:
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- a) The CJEU as a guidance providerAuthors:
- b) The CJEU as a mediator in multilevel legal ordersAuthors:
- c) Knowledge and experience with EU lawAuthors:
- d) Trust in domestic judicial institutionsAuthors:
- e) Support for the EUAuthors:
- In the CJEU national judges trust: An empirical assessmentAuthors:
- ConclusionsAuthors:
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- APPENDIX:Authors:
- Survey procedureAuthors:
- VariablesAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- A. Divergent ApproachesAuthors:
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- 1. The EU as sui generisAuthors:
- 2. Opinion 2/13 and the New Legal Order NarrativeAuthors:
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- 1. The Brexit DebateAuthors:
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- 1. REIOs Before the International Law CommissionAuthors:
- D. The EU as a (Classic) International OrganizationAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
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- 1. IntroductionAuthors:
- 2. The Legitimising Role of Human Rights in International Relations: An African Anxiety?Authors:
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- 3.1 Human Rights in the Treaty Framework of the East African Court of JusticeAuthors:
- 3.2 Human Rights in the Treaty Framework of the Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African StateAuthors:
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- 4.1 International Human Rights in the Practice of the EACJAuthors:
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- 4.2.1 Expanding ratione personaeAuthors:
- 4.2.2 Overriding Domestic Obstacles to Human Rights AdjudicationAuthors:
- 4.2.3 International Human Rights Law as Justification for ECCJ DecisionsAuthors:
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- My iCourts experienceAuthors:
- Authors: |Download chapter (PDF)
- I. IntroductionAuthors: |
- II. Territorial Disputes by Proxy And The Mega-politics of TerritoryAuthors: |
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- A. The Mega-politics of Territory in The Practice of The Central American Court of JusticeAuthors: |
- IV. Right-Based And Institutional Territorial Disputes by Proxy in The Practice of The European Court of Human RightsAuthors: |
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- Our iCourts experienceAuthors: |
- Working papers
- Working papers
- Appendix III: iCourts Staff List – 2012
- Appendix IV: iCourts Staff List - 2021
- Appendix V: Visiting Researchers 2012-2021
- Appendix VI: Hyperlink to iCourts Working Papers Series
- Appendix VII: Principal Investigator Projects at iCourts




