
The focus of this edited volume is the often-overlooked importance of secondary rules of international law. Secondary rules of international law-such as attribution, causality, and the standard and burden of proof-have often been neglected in scholarly literature and have seen fragmented application in international legal practice. Yet the systemic nature of international law entails that coherent and consistent application of such rules is a key element in reinforcing the legitimacy of decisions of international courts and tribunals. Accelerated development of international law and international litigation, coupled with the fragmented nature of the adjudicatory terrain calls for theoretical scrutiny and systemic analysis of the developments in the judicial treatment of secondary rules. This publication makes three important contributions to the study of secondary rules. First, it offers a comprehensive, expert doctrinal analysis of how standard of review, causation, evidentiary rules, and attribution operate in the case law of international courts or tribunals in fields spanning human rights, trade, investment, and humanitarian law. Second, it comparatively evaluates the divergent layers of meanings and normative expectations attached to secondary rules in international law scholarship as well as in the judicial practice of international courts and tribunals. Finally, the book investigates the role that secondary rules play in the development of the primary rules in international law and for the legitimacy of the decisions of international courts and tribunals.Earlier scholarly works have not problematized the role of secondary rules of international law in adjudication thoroughly. Secondary Rules of Primary Importance in International Law seeks to fill this gap by emphasizing the consequential nature of these secondary rules and argues that the outcome of litigation is fundamentally shaped by the exact standard of proof, standard of review, or attribution basis t
This volume investigates how secondary rules of international law—specifically attribution, causality, evidence, and standards of review—fundamentally shape the outcomes and legitimacy of international judicial proceedings. The authors, including Başak Çali and Marko Milanovic, address the historical neglect of these procedural mechanisms in scholarly literature. By analyzing the systemic application of these rules across various international courts and tribunals, the text argues that consistent procedural standards are essential for the coherence and authority of international legal practice.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners view this volume as a necessary intervention in the study of international adjudication. Experts highlight the text's ability to bridge the gap between fragmented procedural applications and the broader systemic requirements of international law.
Page Count:
363
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192695614
ISBN-13:
9780192695611
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