Readership: Academics, scholars, and advanced students of international law and the interaction between national and international law
Yuval Shany, Hersch Lauterpacht Chair in Public International Law, Faculty of Law, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"I find the book's discussion continuously instructive and clear and the arguments often brilliant" - Pavlos Eleftheriadis, Transnational Legal Theory
Introduction I: Doctrinal Implications of Increased Jurisdictional Interaction II: The Internationalization of the National III: The Need for Regulation IV Structure of the Treatise and Research Methodology : Part I: COMPETING PARADIGMS FOR DELINEATING THE RELATIONS BETWEEN NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL COURTS 1: Categorizing Vertical and Horizontal Jurisdictional Interaction 1.1: Stating the Obvious: Regulated Interactions between National and International Courts 1.2: Uncharted Territory: Unregulated Interactions between National and International Courts 2: Conceptualizing the Relations between National and International Courts 2.1: Tradtional Objections to Regulation: Dualism and Hierarchy 2.2: Alternative Relationship Theories 3: The Fragmentation of International Law 3.1: Fragmentation and Jurisdictional Interaction 3.2: Disintegrationism and Integrationism in Practice 3.3: Analogies to the National/International Relationship II: REGULATING RELATIONS BETWEEN NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL COURTS 4: The Feasibility of Regulation: Do National and International Proceedings Overlap? 4.1: Non-Hierarchical Context 4.2: Applicability of International Jurisdiction-regulating Rules 4.3: Conditions of Jurisdictional Competition 4.4: Interim Conclusions 5: Application of Jurisdictional-regulating Norms 5.1: Choice of Forum Rules 5.2: Multiple Proceedings 5.3: Interim Conclusions 6: Flexible Jurisdiction-regulating Rules 6.1: Comity 6.2: Abus de droit 6.3: Interim Conclusions Conclusions
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