Buch, Englisch, Band 382, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 728 g
Reihe: Collected Courses of The Hague Academy of International Law - Recueil des cours
Buch, Englisch, Band 382, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 728 g
Reihe: Collected Courses of The Hague Academy of International Law - Recueil des cours
ISBN: 978-90-04-33830-2
Verlag: Brill Academic Publishers
International Case Law in the Development of International Law, by B. B. JIA, Professor of Law, Tsinghua University, Beijing.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
EXCERPT FROM TABLE OF CONTENTS (D.COOPER, C. KUNER)
Chapter I. Introduction
A. The globalized nature of commerce and communication
B. Influence of the Internet
C. Growth of data protection law
D. Growth of IDR
E. Conflicts between IDR and data protection
Chapter II. Relevant data protection issues
A. Development of data protection law
B. Important data protection concepts
C. Data localization
Chapter III. Relevant IDR issues
A. Overview
B. Litigation
C. Arbitration
D. A special example: WADA arbitration
Chapter IV. Conflicts between data protection and IDR
A. Introduction
B. Choice of law and jurisdiction in data protection law
C. Evidence collection (discovery) in litigation
D. Evidence collection in WADA sports arbitration cases
E. Sports cases pending before the European Court of Human Rights
F. Blocking statutes
G. Parties caught in the middle
Chapter V. Reconciling data protection and IDR
A. Introduction
B. Scope of the problem
C. Relevant issues
D. Mechanisms for managing conflicts
E. Developing a more global perspective
F. Taking data protection into account in IDR requirements
G. Taking IDR into account in data protection law
H. Conclusions
Bibliography
EXCERPT FROM TABLE OF CONTENTS (B. B. JIA)
Chapter I. Introduction
A. Scope of “development”
B. A realistic view of judicial function
C. Terminology: judicial decisions, precedents, case law, and jurisprudence.
D. International decisions and national decisions in which international law is applicable law
E. Structure and premise of the course
Chapter II. Status of precedents in international law: Article 38 (1) (d) ICJ Statute
A. Material and formal sources of international law
B. The adoption of Article 38 (1) (d) of the PCIJ Statute
C. A subsidiary means to determine rules of international law
Chapter III. The doctrine and practice of precedent in municipal law
A. The doctrine of precedent
B. General applicability of the doctrine
C. The declaratory school of thought as known in domestic legal systems
D. Binding precedents in a hierarchically structured judicial system
Chapter IV. The emergent doctrine of precedent in international law
A. PCIJ and ICJ
B. ICTY/ICTR
C. WTO DSB
D. ICC
E. CJEU
F. ECtHR
G. IACHR
H. ICSID arbitrations
I. Conclusion
Chapter V. Notions of municipal law applicable in the doctrine of precedent of international law
A. Law-making by precedent: the role of analogy
B. Law-making by precedent: distinguishing and overruling
C. Judicial decisions may be either authoritative or persuasive precedents
D. The (convenient) distinction between ratio decidendi and obiter dictum
Chapter VI. The development of international law by case law in the strict sense
A. Judge-made law and judicial legislation
B. The law of maritime delimitation
C. The doctrine of command responsibility
D. The doctrine of inter-temporal law
E. Interpretation of treaties
F. Relevance of general principles of law under Article 38 (1) (c)
G. The impact of the policy-oriented approach
H. Judicial legislation: inherent power and the power to determine rules of procedure (and evidence)
Chapter VII. Precedents in the development of customary law
A. ICJ’s approach
B. Clarification of customary law
C. Declaration of the existence of customary law
D. Remark
Chapter VIII. Effect of development
A. Criteria for evaluation
B. Authoritative precedents
C. Development that fails to settle the law
D. Distinguishing
E. Can the potential for law-making be put beyond the competence of a court ?
Chapter IX. Conclusions
A. An emergent doctrine of precedent
B. Precedents as a source of mixed nature: rules of recognition
C. Development of international law by precedents
Bibliography.