'The potential audience of A Farewell to Fragmentation should include anyone, including academics, students, and practitioners, who is interested in the debate(s) over fragmentation in international law. Since its overall argument is that fragmentation is now outweighed by its opposite, it may also interest those who are tired of hearing about fragmentation.' Sondre Torp Helmersen, Leiden Journal of International Law
List of contributors; 1. Introduction: from fragmentation to convergence Mads Andenas and Eirik Bjorge; Part I. Reassertion and Convergence: 'Proliferation' of Courts and the Centre of International Law; Section A. At the Centre: The International Court: 2. Unity and diversity in international law Christopher Greenwood; 3. A century of international justice and prospects for the future Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade; 4. The International Court of Justice and human rights treaty bodies Nigel Rodley; 5. The ICJ and the challenges of human rights law Vera Gowlland-Debbas; 6. Factors influencing fragmentation and convergence in international courts Philippa Webb; Section B. 'Regimes' of International Law: 7. Fragmentation or partnership? The reception of ICJ case-law by the European Court of Human Rights Dean Spielmann; 8. Factors influencing the reception of international law in the case law of the ECtHR's case law: a review Magdalena Forowicz; 9. The influence of the International Court of Justice on the law of provisional measures Cameron A. Miles; 10. Just another case of treaty interpretation? Reconciling humanitarian and human rights law in the ICJ Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne; 11. Fragmentation within international human rights law Mehrdad Payandeh; 12. The European Union's participation in international economic institutions: a mutually beneficial reassertion of the centre Emanuel Castellarin; 13. Reinforcing the ICJ's central international role? Domestic courts' enforcement of ICJ decisions and opinions Veronika Fikfak; Part II. A Farewell to Fragmentation and the Sources of International Law; Section A. Custom and Jus Cogens: 14. The International Court of Justice and the international customary law game of cards Lorenzo Gradoni; 15. State practice, treaty practice and state immunity Alexander Orakhelashvili; 16. Historical sketches of custom in international law Jean-Louis Halpérin; Section B. Treaty Interpretation: 17. Is there a subject-matter ontology in interpretation of international legal norms? Robert Kolb; 18. Halfway between fragmentation and convergence: the role of the rules of the organization in the interpretation of constituent treaties Paolo Palchetti; 19. The convergence of the methods of treaty interpretation Eirik Bjorge; 20. The centre reasserting itself Mads Andenas; Index.