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International Courts in Latin America and the Caribbean

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International Courts in Latin America and the Caribbean Synopsis

This book provides the first in-depth and empirically grounded analysis of the foundations and evolution of the four Latin American and Caribbean regional economic courts: the Central American Court of Justice (CACJ), the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), the Andean Tribunal of Justice (ATJ), and the Mercosur Permanent Review Court (MPRC). While these Courts were established to build common markets and to enforce trade liberalisation, they have often developed bodies of jurisprudence in domains not directly associated with regional economic integration. The CCJ has been most successful in the area of human and fundamental rights; the CACJ has addressed issues related to the enforcement of the rule of law in national legal arenas and longstanding border disputes between the countries of the region; and the ATJ is an island of effective adjudication on intellectual property issues. The particular trajectories of these four Courts suggest that there is no universal formula for success. Challenging the mainstream account, this book argues that the Courts' operational path is not necessarily a function of their formally delegated competences or the will of the Member States. Rather, local socio-political contextual factors play a far more decisive role in influencing the direction of regional economic courts during and after their establishment.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780198867999
Publication date: 29th October 2020
Author: Salvatore (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen) Caserta
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 320 pages
Series: International Courts and Tribunals Series
Genres: International law: courts and procedures
Public international law: economic and trade
Comparative law
International relations