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Now showing items 21-30 of 238
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2014)
In the 2012-2013 legal year, eight cases from the Supreme Court concerned jurisdiction and devolution issues. Three concerned the competencies of devolved legislatures, two the right to appeal from Scottish courts, and ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2017)
The principle of legality is an integral part of international criminal law (ICL). International criminal courts and tribunals (ICCTs) have applied a ‘soft’ version of legality that has seldom operated as a meaningful curb ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / SubmittedVersion, 2016)
The current article provides a critical overview of the CJEU’s role as the main ‘architect’ of the relationship between the EU legal order and the international legal order. The activities of the CJEU are assessed in light ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2017)
It is often claimed that international investment arbitration is marked by a revolving door: individuals act sequentially and even simultaneously as arbitrator, legal counsel, expert witness, or tribunal secretary. If this ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2016)
The provisions on genocide protect four exclusive, amongst others the racial, groups. Yet, international criminal tribunals are manifestly uncomfortable with collective groupings and interpret ‘race’ rather inconsistently. ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2016)
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2017)
An important ‘stress test’ for regional human rights courts would be to see how well such courts perform when faced with authoritarian, human rights-violating regimes that they are supposed to hinder or constrain. These ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2017)
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2013)
Nordic Journal of Human Rights. 2013, 31(2), 262-278 http://www.idunn.no/ts/ntmr/2013/02
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2019)
That an accused receives a fair trial is essential to the legitimacy of international criminal courts and tribunals. However, how best to interpret the right to a fair trial in order to maximize the legitimacy of international ...