Skip to main content

Avoidance in International Dispute Settlement

Jurisdiction, Admissibility, and Justiciability

Avoidance in International Dispute Settlement cover

Avoidance in International Dispute Settlement

Jurisdiction, Admissibility, and Justiciability

Description

This book offers a bold new perspective on how international adjudication operates.

While international courts claim to decide all disputes over which they have jurisdiction, this book argues that sometimes they strategically choose not to. Through detailed case studies and a close analysis of international procedural law, it reveals that courts decide most disputes most of the time - but not all.

By unpacking how courts use doctrines of jurisdiction and admissibility to avoid or narrow down certain issues, the book exposes the covert techniques of judicial avoidance. It shows how the flexibility of international procedural law allows judges to manage politically sensitive disputes without openly acknowledging that they are relying on avoidance doctrines.

This book offers a nuanced and realistic account of international adjudication, one that recognises how legal principle is often weighed against political and practical realities.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. International Dispute Settlement in Context
2. The Evolution of Justiciability and Subject Matter Jurisdiction
3. Legal Theory and International Procedural Law
4. Express and Implied (or Covert) Avoidance Doctrines
5. Covert Avoidance Doctrines in Practice: Case Studies
Conclusion

Product details

Published 06 Aug 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 304
ISBN 9781509993536
Imprint Hart Publishing
Series Studies in International Law
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Manuel Casas Martinez

Manuel Casas Martinez is a Barrister at Twenty Ess…

Related Titles

Environment: Staging