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Over the last century, international courts, once reserved for arcane matters of diplomacy and trade, have begun to address a broad range of human experience and activity. This volume corrects some of the common misperceptions about international judges, while providing a balanced introduction to both the strengths and shortcomings of their work. As they rule on crucial issues of war and peace, human rights, and trade, in addition to high-profile criminal trials, international judges are playing a critical role in developments that will affect world affairs for years to come. Based on interviews with more than 30 international judges, this volume is the first comprehensive portrait of the men and women in this new global profession. The working environment of international judges is closely examined in courts around the world, highlighting the challenge of carrying out work in multiple languages, in the context of intricate bureaucratic hierarchies, and with a necessary interdependence between judges and their courts' administration. Arguing that international judges have to balance their responsibilities as interpreters of the law and as global professionals, the authors discuss the challenges of working in the fluid circumstances of international courts. Profiles of five individual judges provide insight into the experience and dilemmas of the men and women on the international bench.
Over the last century, international law, once reserved for arcane
matters of diplomacy and trade, has come to encompass a broad range
of human experience and activity. In the wake of major historical
developments, the nations of the world have created a new set of
legal institutions designed to resolve disputes between global
actors, to settle conflicts that might otherwise play out on the
battlefield, and to offer the promise of justice to those who
cannot find it within their own countries. The success of these
institutions rests ultimately on the shoulders of just over 200 men
and women who serve in a role unheard of less than a hundred years
ago: the international judge.
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