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The Role of National Courts in Applying International Humanitarian Law (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R4,162
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The Role of National Courts in Applying International Humanitarian Law (Hardcover, New)
Series: International Law and Domestic Legal Orders
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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International law is increasingly applied in domestic courts. This
can result in situations where the courts are being asked to rule
on politically sensitive issues, especially issues which involve
actions during armed conflicts. Domestic courts do not show a
uniformity of approach in addressing cases concerning international
humanitarian law, and can often be seen to differ markedly in their
response. The book argues that different national courts
demonstrate different functional roles in different countries.
These can be situated on a scale from apology to utopia, which can
be set out as follows: (1) the apologist role of courts, in which
they serve as a legitimating agency of the state's actions; (2) the
avoiding role of courts, in which they, for policy considerations,
avoid exercising jurisdiction over a case; (3) The deferral role of
courts, in which courts defer back to the other branches of the
government the responsibility of finding an appropriate remedy (4)
the normative application role of courts, in which they apply
international humanitarian law as required by the rule of law; and
(5) the utopian role of courts, in which they introduce moral
judgments in favour of the protection of the individual, beyond the
requirements of the law. The book investigates the rulings of five
key domestic courts, those of the UK, the USA, Canada, Italy, and
Israel, to understand how their approaches differ, and where their
practice can be placed on the methological scale. This analysis has
been assisted by the author's extensive field work, notably in
Israel and in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Providing a
detailed understanding each court's function, the book offers a
critical analysis of the courts' rulings, in which both the legal
arguments and the political context of cases they have ruled on are
examined. The book shows that the functional role of the national
courts is a combination of contradictions and mixed attitudes, and
that national courts are in the process of defining their own role
as enforcing organs of international humanitarian law.
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