The International Court of Justice and Specialised International Adjudicative Bodies: From Indifference to Authority Trading
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The International Court of Justice and Specialised International Adjudicative Bodies: From Indifference to Authority Trading
German Yearbook of International Law, Vol. 65(2022), Iss. 1 : pp. 291–318 | First published online: March 13, 2024
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Zarbiyev, Fuad
Abstract
Abstract: In stark contrast to its typical disinclination to engage with the case law of other courts and tribunals, the International Court of Justice has shown a remarkably consistent attitude of deference towards specialised courts and tribunals the last two decades. That trend was, however, disrupted in 2021 in the judgment rendered in
Table of Contents
| Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fuad Zarbiyev\nThe International Court of Justice and Specialised International Adjudicative Bodies: From Indifference to Authority Trading | 291 | ||
| I. The Changing Ecology of International Adjudication | 295 | ||
| II. The Modus Co-vivendi of Bosnian Genocide as a Strategy for Authority Trading | 301 | ||
| III. The Prospects of Authority Trading after the Qatar v. UAE Judgment | 306 | ||
| IV. Is the ICJ’s Monopoly Over General International Law Matters Practically Possible? | 309 | ||
| V. Conclusion | 312 |