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Time and International Adjudication fills a gap in legal literature in the field of international dispute settlement, by providing a wide selection of stimulating contributions by leading international scholars and lawyers, aimed at discussing the role of time in proceedings before international courts and tribunals. The relevance of the temporal factor in international adjudication is assessed by considering each of the different phases of international judicial proceedings. The analysis covers inter-State proceedings before both permanent courts and tribunals (such as the ICJ, ITLOS and the DSB of the WTO) and arbitral tribunals, as well as international proceedings between individuals and States before regional human rights courts and investment tribunals.
Andrea Gattini (editor) is Full Professor of International Law at the University of Padova, School of Law.Marco Dimetto (associate editor) is Assistant Professor of International Law at the University of Padova, School of Law.
Time and International Adjudication: an IntroductionPART 1: Initiating the proceedings1 The Time Factor in Bringing a Case before the International Court of JusticeAndreas Zimmermann2 Jurisdiction ratione temporis of the International Court of JusticeGiorgio Gaja3 The Distinction between Disputes and Claims and the Question of Time: from Mavrommatis to the Marshall IslandsZachary Douglas KC4 The Time of the Seisin as a Pivotal Factor for the Settlement of Inter-State DisputesMarco Dimetto5 Temporal Aspects of Dispute Settlement Proceedings at the International Tribunal for the Law of the SeaLyna Maaziz and Niki Aloupi6 The Three Regional Human Rights Courts: One Single Understanding of the Time in ‘Instituting the Proceedings’?Laurence Burgorgue-Larsen7 The Time Element in the Initiation of Inter-State ArbitrationSerena Forlati8 Practical Considerations for Litigating Investment Arbitration Disputes in Times of CrisisChristina L. Beharry and Katherine PeifferPART 2: Incidental Proceedings9 Incidental Proceedings in the ICJ and the Fateful Passage of TimeMatina Papadaki10 Filing of Counter-Claim after the Laps of the Title of JurisdictionA Brief Analysis of the Court’s Order of 15 November 2017 in the Case of Alleged Violations of Sovereign Rights and Maritime Spaces in the Caribbean Sea (Nicaragua v. Colombia)Hadi Azari11 Intervention in the Collective Interest before the International Court of Justice – the Time has Finally Come?Alina Miron12 Rendezvous between Provisional Measures and Prompt Release in the ITLOS JurisprudenceReflections on the M/T “San Padre Pio” and M/T “Heroic Idun” CasesYoshifumi Tanaka13 Provisional Measures before Regional Human Rights CourtsChristina Binder14 Time and Investment State Settlement Disputes: Running On or Out of Time?Chiara Giorgetti and Craig D. GaverPART 3: Evidence15 The Role of Good Administration of Justice in Admitting Untimely and Informal Documents before the International Court of JusticeCarlotta Ceretelli16 The Role of the Time Element in Providing Facts before ITLOSGian Maria Farnelli17 Temporal Aspects of the use of Experts in the Proceedings before the ICJ and ITLOSMakane Moïse Mbengue and Rukmini Das18 Evidence in WTO Dispute SettlementSunayana Sasmal and Petros C. Mavroidis19 The Role of Time in Allocating the Burden of Proof in Investment ArbitrationArnaud de NanteuilPART 4: Interpretation of Applicable Law20 Time, Custom, and International LitigationAlexandre Hermet21 Precedent as Retrospection: the Practice of the International Court of JusticeGleider Hernández22 Res Judicata and TimeNiccolò Ridi23 Applicable Law and Evolutionary Interpretation of the “Legal Order for the Seas and the Oceans”: the ITLOS and UNCLOS Arbitral Tribunals ExperienceRoberto Virzo24 Adapting International Instruments over Time: Remarks on the Evolutive Interpretation of the European Convention on Human RightsLinos-Alexander Sicilianos25 Intertemporal Issues in the Interpretation of GATT Article XXIMariana de AndradePART 5: Post Judgment26 Patience and Perseverance: Time and Compliance with Inter-State Judicial DecisionsPhilippa Webb27 Implementation of Human Rights Judgments in Latin AmericaJorge Contesse28 From Rectification to Revision: the Timeless Character of Post-Award ProceedingsAndreas Kulick29 Enhancing the Relevance of Revision in International AdjudicationRelja Radović30 Handle with Care: Judicial Review Procedures of International Judgments and AwardsLoris Marotti31 ‘As Time Goes By’: the Time-to-Compliance in WTO Dispute SettlementAndrea HamannIndex
Klaus J. Bade, Pieter C. Emmer, Leo Lucassen, Jochen Oltmer, Klaus J. (Universitat Osnabruck) Bade, Pieter C. (Universiteit Leiden) Emmer, Leo (Universiteit Leiden) Lucassen, Jochen (Universitat Osnabruck) Oltmer, Klaus J Bade, Pieter C Emmer