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This study analyzes the first century of the evolution of internationaladjudication as a permanent fixture of international society. Through a casestudy approach examining specific international courts Jean Allain seeks todemonstrate the various limitations to effective adjudication on theinternational plain. By examining the Hague System of adjudication asmanifest in the Permanent Court of Arbitration and the World Court thestructural limitation of a system predicated on volunteer acceptance ofadjudication is drawn out. Finally the European Court of Justice is examinedto demonstrate that the rule of law can be effectively implementedinternationally if States so desire and that it is simply the intransigence ofStates over the last century which has limited the rule of law on theinternational plain. TOCPreface Table of cases Introduction 1. ThePermanent Court of Arbitration 2. The Permanent Court of International Justiceand the International Court of Justice 3. The Central American Court ofJustice 4. The European Court of Human rights and the InterAmerican Court ofHuman Rights 5. The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia6. The European Court of Justice Conclusions Appendices. «
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