OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS The post Cold War proliferation of international adjudicatory bodies and international adjudication has had dramatic effects on both international law and politics, greatly affecting international relations, particularly economic relations, the enforcement of human rights, and the criminal pursuit of perpetrators of mass atrocities. International courts and tribunals have become, in some respects, the lynchpin of the modern international legal system. The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication Available in Hardcover 2014 │ ISBN: 9780199660681 LIST PRICE: $210.00 │ PROMO OFFER: $168.00 ABOUT THE EDITORS CESARE ROMANO is Professor of Law at Loyola Law School Los Angeles . KAREN J. ALTER is Professor of Political Science and Law at Northwestern University. YUVAL SHANY is the Hersch Lauterpacht Chair in International Law at the Law Faculty of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. ORDER TODAY! visit www.oup.com/us and use promo code 32297 The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication uniquely brings together analysis of the legal, philosophical, ethical and political considerations brought about by these bodies. It provides an original and comprehensive understanding of the various forms of international adjudication. A series of cross-cutting chapters overview key issues in the field, both theoretical and practical, providing scholars, students, and practitioners with a detailed understanding of important legal and political influences within the international adjudicative process. The Oxford Handbook of International Adjudication will be an invaluable and thought-provoking resource for scholars and students of international law and political science, and to legal practitioners at international courts and tribunals. "Comprehensive in its coverage, innovative in its wide variety of multi-layered approaches to international adjudication, this Handbook presents a highly stimulating challenge to our current perceptions of this subject." -Georges Abi Saab "This Handbook marks a milestone in the evolution of international courts and tribunals, transforming a field devoted to the careful documentation and analysis of individual institutions into a rich tapestry of crosscutting themes and issues. It is an indispensable reference book for lawyers, political scientists, sociologists, and legal philosophers and is almost certain to be the precursor to a casebook and a set of web-based teaching materials." -Anne-Marie Slaughter 198 Madison Avenue New York, NY 10016 www.oup.com/us OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS TABLE OF CONTENTS Part 1: Mapping International Adjudication 14: David Caron: International Claims Part 5: Key Actors and Compensation Bodies 1: Cesare Romano, Karen Alter, and 15: Christoph Schreuer: Arbitration of Yuval Shany: Mapping International Investment Disputes Courts and Tribunals, the Issues and Players Part 3: Theoretical Approaches to Studying International Adjudication 2: Cesare Romano, Karen Alter, & Francesco Sebregondi: Illustrations: A 16: Maya Steinitz: Transnational Reader's Guide Legal Process Theories 27: Daniel Terris & Leigh Swigart: The International Judge 3: Mary Ellen O'Connell: The Origins of International Adjudication 17: Mark Pollack: Political Science Theories 30: Kevin Jon Heller: International Criminal Prosecutors 4: Karen Alter: Contemporary International Adjudicators: Evolution and Multiplication 18: Mikael Rask Madsen: Sociological 31: Kate Gibson: Defense Counsels in International Criminal Courts Approaches 19: Samantha Besson: Trustees of 5: Cesare Romano: Trial and Error in International Law? Philosophical International Judicialization Queries of the Proper Role of International Courts 6: Cesare Romano: The Shadow Zones in International Judicialization Part 4: Crucial Issues in Contemporary International 7: Jorge Vinuales & Pierre-Marie Adjudication Dupuy: The Challenge of Proliferation: Legal & Normative Debates About 20: Andre Nollkamper: Conversations International Adjudication among Courts: International and Domestic Adjudicators Part 2: Orders and Families of International Adjudicators 21: Larry Helfer: Effectiveness of International Adjudicators 8: Jose Alvarez: The Main Functions of International Adjudicators 22: Alexandra Huneeus: Enforcement / Compliance with 9: Sean Murphy: International Courts Decisions and Provisional Measures and Tribunals for Inter-State Disputes 23: Eric Voeten: International Judicial 10: William Schabas: Criminal Courts Behavior 28: Antoine Vauchez: The International Litigators 29: Michael Wood & Eran Sthoeger: The International Bar 32: Cristina Hoss & Stephanie Cartier: Legal Secretariats, Registry and Staff Part 6: Selected Legal and Procedural Issues of International Adjudication 33: Ruth Mackenzie: Election and Selection of Judges 34: Anja Seibert-Fohr: Judicial Ethics 35: Yuval Shany: Jurisdiction and Admissibility 36: Yael Ronen & Yael Neggan: Third Parties (Including Victims' Rights) 37: Anna Riddell: Evidence, FactFinding, and Experts 38: Chester Brown: Inherent Powers 11: Solomon Ebobrah: Human Rights 24: Tom Ginsburg: Political Courts Constraints 25: Natalie Klein: Who Litigates? 12: Carl Baudenbacher: Courts of Regional Economic and Political Integration Agreements 26: Armin von Bogdandy & Ingo Venzke: Judgments and Decisions: The Making of International Law by 13: Chittharanjan Felix Amerasinghe: International Courts and Tribunals Administrative Tribunals 39: Christine Gray: Remedies 40: Thordis Ingadottir: Financing