
Transplanting International Courts Provides A Deep, Systematic Investigation Of The Most Active And Successful Transplant Of The European Court Of Justice. The Andean Tribunal Is Effective By Any Plausible Definition Of The Term, But Only In The Domain Of Intellectual Property Law. Alter And Helfer Explain How The Andean Tribunal Established Its Legal Authority Within And Beyond This Intellectual Property Island, And How Andean Judges Have Navigated Moments Of Both Transnational Political Consensus And Political Contestation Over The Goals And Objectives Of Regional Economic Integration. By Letting Member States Set The Pace And Scope Of Andean Integration, By Condemning Unequivocal Violations Of Andean Rules, And By Allowing For The Coexistence Of National Legislation And Supranational Authority, The Tribunal Has Retained Its Fidelity To Andean Law While Building Relationships With Nationally-based Administrative Agencies, Lawyers, And Judges. Yet The Tribunal's Circumspect And Formalist Approach Means That, Unlike In Europe, Community Law Is Not An Engine Of Integration. The Tribunal's Strategy Has Also Limited Its Influence Within The Andean Legal System. Transplanting International Courts Also Revists The Authors' Path-breaking Scholarship On The Effectiveness Of International Adjudication. Alter And Helfer Argue That The European Court Of Justice Benefitted In Underappreciated Ways From The Support Of Jurist Advocacy Movements That Are Absent Or Poorly Organized In The Andes And Elsewhere In The World. The Andean Tribunal's Longevity Despite These And Other Challenges Offers Guidance For International Courts In Other Developing Country Contexts. Moreover, Given That The Andean Community Has Weathered Member State Withdrawals And Threats Of Exit, Major Economic And Political Crises, And The Retrenchment Of Core Policies Such As The Common External Tariff, The Andean Experience Offers Timely And Important Lessons For Europe's International Courts.
This book investigates the factors that allow international courts to establish legal authority and maintain effectiveness within developing country contexts, using the Andean Tribunal as a primary case study. The authors, Karen J. Alter and Laurence R. Helfer, utilize extensive empirical research and comparative legal analysis to examine how the Andean Tribunal succeeded in the specific domain of intellectual property law. They argue that the tribunal's success stems from a strategic, formalist approach that balances supranational authority with national political realities, contrasting this with the European Court of Justice model.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of international adjudication and regional integration. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the nuanced perspective the authors bring to the limitations of transplanting European legal models into developing regions.
Page Count:
308
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
ISBN-10:
019150212X
ISBN-13:
9780191502125
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