'A most welcome book which highlights the reach of human rights into the purview of a wide range of international courts and tribunals. The entry points are multiple: due process rights, substantive applicable law or means of interpretation. 'Other' international courts and tribunals have become important partners to human rights courts and treaty bodies, as the book aptly demonstrates.' Laurence Boisson de Chazournes, University of Geneva
1. How and why to assess the relevance of human rights norms in 'other' international courts? Martin Scheinin; 2. The interpretation and development of international human rights law by the International Court of Justice Gentian Zyberi; 3. The International Court of Justice as an integrator, developer and globaliser of international human rights law Başak Çalı, Lorna McGregor and Zeynep Elibol; 4. The systemic effect of international human rights law on international criminal law Alexandre Skander Galand; 5. The emerging right to justice in international criminal law: a case study of Colombia Marina Aksenova; 6. Human rights at the reparations system of the International Criminal Court Juan-Pablo Pérez-León-Acevedo; 7. International human rights law and dispute settlement in the World Trade Organisation Holger Hestermeyer; 8. Invoking human rights: a useful line of attack or a defence tool for states in investor-state dispute settlement? Freya Baetens; 9. Human rights norms in the Court of Justice of the European Union Vasiliki Kosta and Bruno De Witte; 10. The uneven impact of international human rights law in Africa's subregional courts Solomon T. Ebobrah; 11. Human rights, constitutional justice and international economic adjudication: legal methodology problems Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann; 12. The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea and human rights Anna Petrig and Marta Bo; 13. Forum shopping and human rights: staring at the empty shelves Payam Akhavan; 14. Taking stock: relevance of human rights norms in 'other' international courts Martin Scheinin.