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This book aims to enhance understanding of the interactions between the international and national rule of law. It demonstrates that the international rule of law is not merely about ensuring national compliance with international law. International law and institutions (eg, international human rights treaty-monitoring bodies and human rights courts) respond to national contestations and show deference to the national rule of law. While this might come at the expense of the certainty of international law, it suggests that the international rule of law can allow for flexibility, national diversity and pluralism.The essays in this volume are set against the background of increasing conflict between international and national legal norms. Moreover the book shows that international law and institutions do not always command blind national obedience to international law, but incorporate a process of adjustment and deference to national law and policies that are protected by the rule of law at the national level.
Machiko Kanetake is Assistant Professor of Public International Law at Utrecht University.André Nollkaemper is Professor of Public International Law and Director of the Amsterdam Center for International Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Amsterdam.
Introduction André Nollkaemper1. The Interfaces Between the National and International Rule of Law: A Framework Paper Machiko KanetakePart I: National Contestations in the Critical Revision of the International Rule of Law2. Judicial Strategies and their Impact on the Development of the International Rule of Law Veronika Fikfak3. The Development of the Immunities of International Organisations in Response to Domestic Contestations Mateja Steinbrück Platiše4. Domestic Review of Treaty-Based International Investment Awards: Effects of the Metalclad Judgmentof the British Columbia Supreme Court Shotaro Hamamoto5. National Contestation of International Investment Law and the International Rule of Law Prabhash Ranjan6. Domestic Non-Judicial Institutions in the Development of the International Rule of Law René Urueña7. Interactions Between Domestic Social Norms and International Law over Trade Dispute Resolution Ji LiPart II: International Deference to the National Legal Order 8. The Rule of Law Dimensions of Dialogues Between National Courts and Strasbourg Birgit Peters9. Three Interpretive Constraints on the European Court of Human Rights Shai Dothan10. Human Rights, the Margin of Appreciation, and the International Rule of Law Andrew Legg11. Subsidiarity in the Practice of International Courts Machiko Kanetake12. Revisiting the Reservations Dialogue: Negotiating Diversity while Preserving Universality ThroughHuman Rights Law Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko13. Universality, Diversity, and Legal Certainty: Cultural Diversity in the Dialogue Between theCEDAW and States Parties Yvonne Donders and Vincent Vleugel14. Domestic Courts Under Scrutiny: The Rule of Law as a Standard (of Deference) in Investor-StateArbitration Hege Elisabeth Kjos15. The Rule of Law at the National and International Levels in Post-Conflict Peace Agreements Jennifer Easterday16. The Rule of Law and the Division of Labour Between National and International Law:The Case of International Energy Relations Stephan W SchillConclusion17. The International Rule of Law in the Cycle of Contestations and Deference Machiko Kanetake and André Nollkaemper