Présentation de l'éditeur
The recent rise of international trade courts and tribunals deserves systemic study and in-depth analysis. This volume gathers contributions from experts specialised in different regional adjudicators of trade disputes and scrutinises their operations in the light of the often-debated legitimacy issues. It not only looks into prominent adjudicators that have played a significant role for global and regional integration; it also encloses the newly established and/or less-known judicial actors. Critical topics covered range from procedures and legal techniques during the adjudication process to the pre- and post-adjudication matters in relation to forum selection and decision implementation. The volume features cross-cutting interdisciplinary discussions among academics and practitioners, lawyers, philosophers and political scientists. In addition to fulfilling the research vacuum, it aims to address the challenges and opportunities faced in international trade adjudication.
Provides a comprehensive study of the multitude of international trade courts, offering comparative analysis across the board
Features in-depth analysis of regional ITCTs that are under-studied, and offers substantive discussion of a number of regional adjudicators
Presents an inter-disciplinary study of adjudication legitimacy with visions from political scientists, lawyers and legal philosophers
Contributors : Robert Howse, Geir Ulfstein, Hélène Ruiz-Fabri, Michelle Zang, Gabrielle Marcea, Reto Marco Malacrida, Pieter-Jan Kuijper, Halvard Haukeland Fredriksen, Donald C. Pogue, Maureen Irish, Paula Wojcikiewicz Almeida, Miguel Antonio Villamizar, Rilka Dragneva, James Thuo Gathii, Illy Ousséni, Michael Ewing-Chow, Ranyta Yusran,Theresa Squatrit, Ole-Kristian Fauchald, Andreas Føllesdal