TY - BOOK AU - Capps,Patrick AU - Evans,Malcolm D. AU - Konstadinidis,Stratos V. TI - Asserting jurisdiction: international and European legal perspectives SN - 1841133051 U1 - 341.4 21 PY - 2003/// CY - Oxford PB - Hart KW - Jurisdiction KW - Europe N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction; Patrick Capps, Malcolm Evans and Stratos Konstadinidis --; I; Theoretical Approaches to the Assertion of Jurisdiction --; 1; Jurisdiction: The State; Frank Berman --; 2; New Wine in Old Bottles or Old Wine in New Bottles or Only Old Wine in Old Bottles? Reflections on the Assertion of Jurisdiction in Public International Law; Iain Scobbie --; 3; The Exercise of Jurisdiction in Private International Law; Jonathan Hill --; II; Approaches to the Assertion of Jurisdiction by Political Bodies --; 4; National Law, International Law and EU Law - How Do They Relate?; Trevor Hartley --; 5; The Member States' Competence and Jurisdiction under the EU/EC Treaties; Stephen Hyett --; 6; Competition Law in a Globalised Marketplace: Beyond Jurisdiction; Brenda Sufrin --; 7; The Jurisdiction of the Security Council: Original Intention and New World Order(s); Colin Warbrick --; 8; Jurisdiction, NATO and the Kosovo Conflict; Christopher Greenwood --; III; Approaches to the Assertion of Jurisdiction by Adjudicative Bodies --; 9; Approaches of Domestic Courts to the Assertion of International Jurisdiction; Hazel Fox --; 10; Assertion of Jurisdiction by the International Court of Justice; Abdul G. Koroma --; 11; Approaches to the Assertion of International Jurisdiction: The Human Rights Committee; Dominic McGoldrick --; 12; Some Problems of Compulsory Jurisdiction before Specialised Tribunals: The Law of the Sea; Alan Boyle --; 13; Activism and Restraint in the European Court of Justice; Stephen Weatherill --; 14; The Assertion of Jurisdiction by the European Court of Justice; John Usher N2 - "The essays in this collection explore the various ways in which a number of key European and International legal institutions attempt to define the boundaries of jurisdictional competence. The principle questions addressed are: (a) Does the relevant institution have a jurisdictional competence adequate to the challenges that it faces? (b) What are the parameters that bear upon the exercise of a particular jurisdictional competence? (c) What are the effects, positive or negative, of extending, restraining or creating a particular jurisdictional competence on those subject to its jurisdiction, other actors and the rule of law itself? Examples of the institutions covered in this book are the Security Council, the European Court of Justice, NATO, the International Court of Justice and the State."--BOOK JACKET ER -