Book contents
- Saving the International Justice Regime
- Saving the International Justice Regime
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Legal Cases
- Resolutions, Statutes, and Treaties
- 1 Progress and Pushback in the Judicialization of Human Rights
- 2 Backlash in Theoretical Context
- 3 The Politics of Withdrawal
- 4 Replacing the International Justice Regime
- 5 Bureaucrats, Budgets, and Backlash: Death by a Thousand Paper Cuts
- 6 Doctrinal Challenges
- 7 How to Save the International Justice Regime
- Appendix Additional Human Rights Courts, Quasi-Judicial Human Rights Institutions, and International and Hybrid Criminal Tribunals
- Select Bibliography
- Index
1 - Progress and Pushback in the Judicialization of Human Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2021
- Saving the International Justice Regime
- Saving the International Justice Regime
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Legal Cases
- Resolutions, Statutes, and Treaties
- 1 Progress and Pushback in the Judicialization of Human Rights
- 2 Backlash in Theoretical Context
- 3 The Politics of Withdrawal
- 4 Replacing the International Justice Regime
- 5 Bureaucrats, Budgets, and Backlash: Death by a Thousand Paper Cuts
- 6 Doctrinal Challenges
- 7 How to Save the International Justice Regime
- Appendix Additional Human Rights Courts, Quasi-Judicial Human Rights Institutions, and International and Hybrid Criminal Tribunals
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This introductory chapter situates the phenomenon of backlash against the international justice regime within a larger debate about the retrenchment of liberal democratic norms. This chapter considers how international courts gain their authority and contends that international human rights and criminal courts enjoy structural, adjudicative, and moral authority over states and political elites. It is precisely these sources of authority, however, that are the targets of backlash. The chapter goes on to provide a definition of backlash politics, suggesting that backlash is action – not just rhetoric – targeted at the authority of international courts. The chapter then puts that definition into practice by providing a typology of backlash, which includes: (1) withdrawals from international courts; (2) the creation of alternate/substitute justice mechanisms; (3) bureaucratic and budgetary restrictions; and (4) doctrinal challenges. The chapter concludes with a roadmap for the rest of the book.
Keywords
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- Information
- Saving the International Justice RegimeBeyond Backlash against International Courts, pp. 1 - 34Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021