MASSIVE SAVINGS JUST FOR YOU!
VIEW DEALS

Challenging Acts of International Organizations Before National Courts



This book is a comprehensive overview of how acts of international organizations have been challenged before national courts. It covers a variety of organizations, including the United Nations, its subsidiary organs, such as the specialized international criminal courts for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, the European Patent Office, the European Schools, EUROCONTROL, OPEC, and INTERPOL. The book... more details
Key Features:
  • Provides a comprehensive overview of judicial review of the acts of international organizations
  • Focuses on four working hypotheses: the nature of judicial review, its interdependence with domestic methods of incorporating international law, the conditions of a human rights-based review, and the tension between the independent functioning of an organization and guaranteeing legal protection against its acts
  • Discusses whether attempts to secure a certain minimum level of legal protection against acts of international organizations through judicial review by national courts may contribute to securing greater accountability of international organizations


R3 054.00 from Loot.co.za

price history Price history

   BP = Best Price   HP = Highest Price

Current Price: R3 054.00

loading...

tagged products icon   Similarly Tagged Products

Features
Author August Reinisch
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780199595297
Publication Date 09/09/2010
Publisher Oxford University Press
Description
This book is a comprehensive overview of how acts of international organizations have been challenged before national courts. It covers a variety of organizations, including the United Nations, its subsidiary organs, such as the specialized international criminal courts for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, the European Patent Office, the European Schools, EUROCONTROL, OPEC, and INTERPOL. The book focuses on four working hypotheses: the nature of judicial review of the acts of international organizations, its interdependence with domestic methods of incorporating international law, the conditions of a human rights-based review, and the tension between the independent functioning of an organization and guaranteeing legal protection against its acts. The book concludes with a discussion of whether attempts to secure a certain minimum level of legal protection against acts of international organizations through judicial review by national courts may contribute to securing greater accountability of international organizations.

As the Kadi-hype following the 2008 European Court of Justice judgment demonstrated, there are many problems associated with the judicial review of acts of international organizations. This book is the first to present a broader overview of how acts of international organizations have been challenged before national courts. It covers such diverse organizations as the United Nations, its subsidiary organs, such as the specialized international criminal courts for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, the European Patent Office, the European Schools, EUROCONTROL, OPEC, and INTERPOL. Building extensively on the case law of domestic courts, the chapters highlight reoccurring legal issues in light of four working hypotheses. These relate to the nature of judicial review of the acts of international organizations, its interdependence with domestic methods of incorporating international law, the conditions of a human rights-based review, and the tension between the independent functioning of an organization and guaranteeing legal protection against its acts. This approach ensures consistency among the book's chapters, which each focus on a different organization. Its conclusion brings the different findings together and analyses them in the light of the working hypotheses. It also discusses whether attempts to secure a certain minimum level of legal protection against acts of international organizations through judicial review by national courts may contribute to securing greater accountability of international organizations.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.