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In today's world of globalisation the position of the highest
national courts is changing. Traditionally, the highest courts have
the task of safeguarding the coherency of law within the territory
of their jurisdiction. Being at the top of the hierarchy of courts
in their country, there was no other authority above them. This
picture is being thoroughly disturbed by the internationalisation
of law, which has brought the domestic legal systems into close
contact with each other and which has created hierarchies among the
highest national courts. This book is an important tool for
national judges, judges and staff of international courts, civil
servants at ministries of justice, and others studying or
practising law on the dividing line between the national and
international level. It contains a reflection of the exchange of
views that took place during a session of the Hague Colloquium on
the Fundamental Principles of Law, which sought to identify the
challenges which emerge for the highest national courts in an
internationalising world. Sam Muller is Director of the Hague
Institute for the Internationalisation of Law (HiiL), The Hague,
the Netherlands. Marc Loth was Dean and Professor of jurisprudence
and legal theory at the Erasmus School of Law, Erasmus University
Rotterdam, the Netherlands at the time of working on this book. He
is a member of the Dutch Hoge Raad (Supreme Court).
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