Jurisdiction in international law /
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Author / Creator: | Ryngaert, Cedric, author. |
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Edition: | Second edition. |
Imprint: | Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2015. ©2015 |
Description: | xxvi, 235 pages ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Oxford monographs in international law Oxford monographs in international law. |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10291599 |
Related Items: | Online version.:
Jurisdiction in international law |
Table of Contents:
- Table of Cases
- List of Abbreviations
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. Scope and Method of This Study
- 1.2. Structure of the Study
- 1.3. Jurisdiction as a Concern of International Law
- 1.4. The Concept of Jurisdiction in Transnational Domestic Litigation
- 1.5. The Concept of Jurisdiction in International Human Rights Treaties
- 1.6. Concluding Remarks
- 2. Public International Law Approaches to Jurisdiction
- 2.1. The Lotus Case
- 2.2. Customary International Law
- 3. The Territoriality Principle
- 3.1. Historical Growth of the Territoriality Principle in Continental Europe
- 3.2. The Territoriality Principle in England
- 3.3. The Territoriality Principle in the United States
- 3.4. Territorial Jurisdiction over Cross-border Offenses
- 3.5. Territorial Jurisdiction and the Internet
- 3.6. Territorial Jurisdiction over Antitrust Violations
- 3.7. Territorial jurisdiction and Securities Regulation
- 3.8. Territoriality and Orders for Discovery Abroad
- 3.9. Territorial Extension of Domestic Law
- 3.10. Concluding Observations
- 4. ThePrinciples of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
- 4.1. Continental Europe v Common Law Countries
- 4.2. Active Personality Principle
- 4.3. Passive Personality Principle
- 4.4. Protective Principle
- 4.5. Universality Principle
- 4.6. Concurrent Jurisdiction and Normative Competency Conflicts
- 5. A Reasonable Exercise of jurisdiction
- 5.1. Comity as a Discretionary Principle of Jurisdictional Restraint
- 5.2. "Reasonable Jurisdiction" Under International Law
- 5.3. The Jurisdictional Rule of Reason of $$$ 403 of the Restatement (Third) of US Foreign Relations Law (1987)
- 5.4. The Problematic Character of the Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as an International Law Norm or Principle
- 5.5. The Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as a Norm of International Law
- 6. ANew Theory of Jurisdiction in international Law
- 6.1. Inevitability, Democracy, and Reciprocity
- 6.2. Substantivism
- 6.3. Devising a Jurisdictional Framework: Using Transnational Regulatory and Judicial Networks
- 6.4. Revisiting Reasonableness: Protective Purpose and Subsidiarity
- 6.5. Final Concluding Remarks
- Index