Part I – Introduction: 1 Reconciling State Immunity with Recognition of War Victims in a Legal Pluriverse by Anne Peters and Valentina Volpe.- Part II – Immunity: 2 Right of Access to (Italian) Courts über alles? Legal Implications beyond Germany’s Jurisdictional Immunity by Paolo Palchetti.- 3 The Illusion of Perfect Justice by Christian Tomuschat.- 4 Sentenza 238/2014: A Good Case for Law-Reform? by Heike Krieger.- Part III – Remedies: 5 A Plea for Legal Peace by Riccardo Pavoni.- 6 A Story of ‘Trials and Errors’ That Might Have No Happy End by Jörg Luther.- 7 State Immunity, Individual Compensation for Victims of Human Rights Crimes, and Future Prospects by Stefan Kadelbach .- 8 Sketches for a Reparation Scheme: How Could a German-Italian Fund for the IMIs Work? by Filippo Fontanelli.- Part IV – European Perspectives: 9 Waiting for Negotiations: An Italian Way to Get Out of the Deadlock by Alessandro Bufalini.- 10 Sentenza 238/2014: EU Law and EU Values by Bernardo Giorgio Mattarella.- 11 The Consequences of Sentenza 238/2014: What to Do Now? by Doris König.- 12 Would the World Be a Better Place If One Were to Adopt a ‘European’ Approach to State Immunity? Or, ‘Soll am europäischen Wesen die Staatenimmunität genesen’? by Andreas Zimmermann.- Part V – Courts: 13 A Dangerous Last Line of Defence: Or, a Roman Court Goes Lutheran by Christian J. Tams.- 14 Teaching the World Court Makes a Bad Case: Revisiting the Relationship between by Domestic Courts and the ICJ by Raffaela Kunz.- 15 Between Cynicism and Idealism: Is the Italian Constitutional Court Passing the Buck to the Italian Judiciary? by Giovanni Boggero and Karin Oellers-Frahm.- Part VI – Negotiations: 16 Deadlocked in Dualism: Negotiating for a Final Settlement by Andreas von Arnauld.- 17 Moving beyond Judicial Conflict in the Name of the Pre-Eminence of Fundamental Human Rights by Valerio Onida.- 18 Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Italian Concerns between Constitutional Rights and International Law by Andreas L. Paulus.- 19 Overcoming the Judicial Conundrum: The Road to a Diplomatic Solution by Francesco Francioni.- Part VII – The Past and Future of Remedies: 20 Recollections of a Judge by Sabino Cassese.- 21 A Dialogical Epilogue by Joseph H.H. Weiler.- Annex: Sentenza 238/2014.
Valentina Volpe, Associate Professor of Public Law and International Law, Lille Catholic University and Senior Research Affiliate, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg
Anne Peters, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg and Professor of International Law, Heidelberg, Freie Universität Berlin, Basel (Switzerland) Universities, and University of Michigan
Stefano Battini, President of the Italian National School for Public Administration, Rome and Professor of Administrative Law, Tuscia University, Viterbo