The reception of international law in the European Court of Human Rights
In: International courts and tribunals series
In: International courts and tribunals series
In: SUR - International Journal On Human Rights, Band 11, Heft 20
SSRN
In: International legal materials: current documents, Band 38, Heft 1, S. 208-246
ISSN: 0020-7829
In: Series on state violence, state terrorism, and human rights
Human rights and universal jurisdiction, Daniel Bodansky; human rights litigation and the one-voice orthodoxy in foreign affairs, Ralph G. Steinhardt; enforcement of human rights in US courts -- the trial of persons kidnapped abroad, John Quigley; courts as teachers in a vital national seminar on human rights, Mark Gibney; international human rights law and U.S. law, John M. Rogers; interest group litigation to enforce human rights -- confronting judicial restraint, Howard Tolley, Jr; toward the economic brown -- economic rights in the United States and the possible contribution of international human rights law, Bert Lockwood; the relation of the individual to the state in the era of human rights, Anthony D'Amato.
In: SVAČEK, Ondřej. International Criminal Court and Human Rights: Achievements and Challenges. In: VICENTE, Dário Moura. Towards a Universal Justice? Putting International Court and Jurisdictions into Perspective. Leiden, Boston: Brill, Nijhoff, 2016, pp. 206-221.
SSRN
In: Human rights review: HRR, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 279-301
ISSN: 1874-6306
In: The Italian Yearbook of International Law Online, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 199-203
ISSN: 2211-6133
In: Chapter 5 in John H Knox and Ramin Pejan (eds), The Human Right to a Healthy Environment (CUP 2018), ISBN 9781108367530
SSRN
Working paper
To what extent should domestic courts apply international law – specifically the international law of human rights? I would like to examine this question with reference to two very different states: the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the United States. For quite distinct reasons, neither of the two has yet fully embraced the idea of direct application in national tribunals of the body of international law that regulates the relationship between human beings and their own governments. As the post-Cold War era unfolds, it is time to ask whether either or both of these erstwhile adversaries might finally be ready for full-fledged implementation of international human rights law in national courts. The Soviet Union is going through such profound political and constitutional change that specific comments run the risk of obsolescence or irrelevancy. In early 1991, when this Essay was in preparation, the breakup of the Union came to seem inevitable, but what will emerge cannot yet be foreseen. Retrogressive developments have cast doubt on the prospects for advancing the rule of law under the current Soviet leadership. Nonetheless, I believe that the issue of domestic application of international human rights law will survive the current tumultuous period and will figure in the disposition of transcendent constitutional issues.
BASE
In: American journal of international law, Band 91, Heft 4, S. 755-756
ISSN: 0002-9300
World Affairs Online
In: Elements of international law
In: Oxford scholarly authorities on international law
In: Oxford public international law
Providing a fresh, objective, and non-argumentative approach to the discipline of international law, this series is an accessible go-to source for practicing international lawyers, judges and arbitrators, government and military officers, scholars, teachers, and students. In this volume, Professor Nussberger explores the Court's uniqueness as an international adjudicatory body in the light of its history, structure, and procedure, as well as its key doctrines and case law. This book also shows the role played by the Court in the development of modern international law and human rights law
In: Elgar studies in human rights