Over the last fifteen years, states have created more independent international tribunals, submitted themselves to the jurisdiction of such tribunals, and litigated disputes before such tribunals in increasing numbers. These developments appear to be inconsistent with principal-agent theory, which asserts states are rational actors jealous of their sovereignty and dubious of delegating authority to international institutions they cannot tightly control. However, such delegations of judicial authority actually serve state interests by enhancing credibility of international law commitments in specific multilateral settings. Having established such tribunals, however, states are concerned that independent judges operate within acceptable parameters. They thus establish a system of "constrained independence," using fine-grained legal, structural, political, and discursive mechanisms to limit the potential for judicial overreaching.
机构:
Univ Chicago, Dept Polit Sci, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
Univ Chicago, Harris Grad Sch Publ Policy, Chicago, IL 60637 USAUniv Chicago, Dept Polit Sci, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
Snidal, Duncan
Wendt, Alexander
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机构:
Ohio State Univ, Mershon Ctr & Polit Sci, Columbus, OH 43210 USAUniv Chicago, Dept Polit Sci, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
机构:
St Petersburg State Univ, Fac Int Relat, Dept European Studies, St Petersburg, RussiaSt Petersburg State Univ, Fac Int Relat, Dept European Studies, St Petersburg, Russia
机构:
Carnegie Endowment Int Peace, Amer Statecraft Program, Washington, DC 20036 USACarnegie Endowment Int Peace, Amer Statecraft Program, Washington, DC 20036 USA