
The period of an international tribunal's temporal jurisdiction is the span of time during which an act must have occurred before the tribunal may consider if the act breached an obligation. There are many questions concerning this particular aspect of an international tribunal's jurisdiction: Does a tribunal have power over acts that occurred after the entry into force of the obligation allegedly breached, but before the tribunal's jurisdiction was accepted? What about acts that began before the tribunal's jurisdiction was accepted but continued after? To what extent can acts before the period of the tribunal's jurisdiction affect its decision on whether or not there is a breach through acts afterwards? The Temporal Jurisdiction of International Tribunals examines these questions in depth. Despite its importance, the temporal jurisdiction of international tribunals is not well understood. Tribunals often confuse different aspects of their jurisdiction and refuse to hear cases they should have heard, or agree to hear cases they should not. This book reduces this confusion by clarifying the different limits on the temporal jurisdiction of international tribunals and the important distinctions between those limits. The book examines the temporal limits resulting from (i) the entry into force of the obligation supposedly breached, (ii) the acceptance of the tribunal's jurisdiction, and (iii) from the period of limitation, as well as the effect of acts that occurred before these limits. Throughout the book, the author comprehensively compares decisions from a wide variety of sources, including the International Court of Justice, Human Rights Courts, World Trade Organization panels, and investment treaty tribunals. It comments on decisions that arose from some of the most notorious events of the twentieth century, including the "Katyn Massacre" of the Second World War, the 1994 Rwandan genocide, and the "forced disappearance" of American political opponents. It reviews t
This book investigates the complex legal parameters defining the temporal jurisdiction of international tribunals and the criteria used to determine whether a tribunal possesses the authority to adjudicate specific acts. Nick Gallus provides a rigorous examination of the procedural and substantive hurdles that arise when international courts evaluate acts occurring across shifting jurisdictional timelines. By analyzing the intersection of treaty obligations, acceptance of jurisdiction, and statutes of limitation, the author constructs a framework to resolve the confusion often present in international judicial decision-making. The text serves as a systematic guide for understanding how tribunals navigate the temporal boundaries of their own authority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners frequently cite this work as a foundational resource for navigating the intricacies of international procedural law. Experts highlight the text for its clarity in distinguishing between overlapping jurisdictional limits that often baffle judicial bodies.
Page Count:
188
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192509403
ISBN-13:
9780192509406
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