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    Jurisdiction in international law / Cedric Ryngaert.

    • Title:Jurisdiction in international law / Cedric Ryngaert.
    •    
    • Author/Creator:Ryngaert, Cedric, author.
    • Published/Created:Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2015.
    • Holdings

       
    • Library of Congress Subjects:Jurisdiction (International law)
    • Edition:Second edition.
    • Description:xxvi, 235 pages ; 24 cm
    • Series:Oxford monographs in international law.
    • Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
    • ISBN:9780199688517 hardback
      0199688516 hardback
    • Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction
      1.1. Scope and Method of This Study
      1.2. Structure of the Study
      1.3. Jurisdiction as a Concern of International Law
      1.4. Concept of Jurisdiction in Transnational Domestic Litigation
      1.5. Concept of Jurisdiction in International Human Rights Treaties
      1.6. Concluding Remarks
      2. Public International Law Approaches to Jurisdiction
      2.1. Lotus Case
      2.2. Customary International Law
      3. Territoriality Principle
      3.1. Historical Growth of the Territoriality Principle in Continental Europe
      3.2. Territoriality Principle in England
      3.3. Territoriality Principle in the United States
      3.4. Territorial Jurisdiction over Cross-border Offenses
      3.5. Territorial Jurisdiction and the Internet
      3.6. Territorial Jurisdiction over Antitrust Violations
      3.7. Territorial Jurisdiction and Securities Regulation
      3.8. Territoriality and Orders for Discovery Abroad
      3.9. Territorial Extension of Domestic Law
      3.10. Concluding Observations
      4. Principles of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
      4.1. Continental Europe v Common Law Countries
      4.2. Active Personality Principle
      4.3. Passive Personality Principle
      4.4. Protective Principle
      4.5. Universality Principle
      4.6. Concurrent Jurisdiction and Normative Competency Conflicts
      5. Reasonable Exercise of Jurisdiction
      5.1. Comity as a Discretionary Principle of Jurisdictional Restraint
      5.2. "Reasonable Jurisdiction" Under International Law
      5.3. Jurisdictional Rule of Reason of [§] 403 of the Restatement (Third) of US Foreign Relations Law (1987)
      5.4. Problematic Character of the Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as an International Law Norm or Principle
      5.5. Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as a Norm of International Law
      6. New Theory of Jurisdiction in International Law
      6.1. Inevitability, Democracy, and Reciprocity
      6.2. Substantivism
      6.3. Devising a Jurisdictional Framework: Using Transnational Regulatory and Judicial Networks
      6.4. Revisiting Reasonableness: Protective Purpose and Subsidiarity
      6.5. Final Concluding Remarks.
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