Courts Crossing Borders: Blurring the Lines of SovereigntyLegal issues that have traditionally been treated as domestic are in-creasingly governed by transnational law and numerous obscure tri-bunals. This book acquaints students of law and politics with the largely unrecognized authority of transnational legal systems and the ways boundaries of national sovereignty are being eroded in the 21st century. The editors have skillfully organized their collection around issues dealing with both human rights and issues of trade and used a comparative approach to analyze the many court decisions, treaties, and legal agreements that affect national sovereignty. Included subject areas are: Courts and Regional Trade Agreements, Dispute Resolution under NAFTA, and Universal Criminal Jurisdiction. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 91
Page 13
Sovereignty was initially conceived as absolute and indivisible and connoted a single source of power . When most people today speak of sovereignty , they are referring to Westphalian sovereignty , associated with the 1648 Peace of ...
Sovereignty was initially conceived as absolute and indivisible and connoted a single source of power . When most people today speak of sovereignty , they are referring to Westphalian sovereignty , associated with the 1648 Peace of ...
Page 47
Under this conception , EU law would still be an expression of international law and state sovereignty would be safeguarded . This interpretation is based on a definition of sovereignty that , following Carl Schmitt , characterizes ...
Under this conception , EU law would still be an expression of international law and state sovereignty would be safeguarded . This interpretation is based on a definition of sovereignty that , following Carl Schmitt , characterizes ...
Page 61
Blurring the Lines of Sovereignty Mary L. Volcansek, John F. Stack. a The Nature of the Challenge to Sovereignty The most commonly presented challenge to sovereignty is the erosion of the autonomy of a political community in determining ...
Blurring the Lines of Sovereignty Mary L. Volcansek, John F. Stack. a The Nature of the Challenge to Sovereignty The most commonly presented challenge to sovereignty is the erosion of the autonomy of a political community in determining ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Judicialization and Sovereignty Mary L Volcansek | 11 |
Transnational Courts | 17 |
Courts and Regional Trade Agreements Mary L Volcansek | 23 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actors acts Advisory agreements American application Article authority binational panels challenge Chapter charges claim Commission committed Common Market Community constitutional Convention Court of Human Court of Justice created crimes against humanity decisions determination direct dispute resolution domestic economic effect enforcement environmental established Europe European Court European Union example final forced Former free trade Global Human Rights ICTY important individuals institutions Integration Inter-American interests International Criminal International Law issue Journal judges Judgment judicial jurisdiction Law Review limited Market measures movement NAFTA nature norms noted Opinion organizations Oxford Oxford University Press panel parties persons policies political principle prosecution protection provides question rape regime regional Relations reports requires result Review rules sentences sexual social sovereignty statute Stone Sweet Studies supranational tion tional transnational Treaty Trial Tribunal United violations violence women World York