
Contents
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A. Selecting appropriate cases A. Selecting appropriate cases
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B. National courts between abstention and engagement beyond the monism/dualism divide B. National courts between abstention and engagement beyond the monism/dualism divide
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C. The internationalization of the Solange approach C. The internationalization of the Solange approach
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D. The quest for an appropriate standard of judicial review D. The quest for an appropriate standard of judicial review
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E. Judicial review in action E. Judicial review in action
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F. Judicial review and jurisdictional immunity F. Judicial review and jurisdictional immunity
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G. Towards more accountability of international organizations G. Towards more accountability of international organizations
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Cite
Abstract
This concluding chapter returns to the working hypotheses formulated in the introduction and assesses how far the individual chapters have confirmed or disproved them. The contributions have confirmed the need of judicial review given the increasing attempts of international organizations to directly regulate individual behaviour. Irrespective of the form of incorporation of international law in the domestic order, courts have started to exercise various forms of indirect review although they are bound to review only the domestic implementing act. Reliance on the Solange reasoning showed that there is need for an implicit decentralized review particularly when fundamental values are at stake. The case law also confirms that the policy rationale underlying both judicial review and jurisdictional immunity tend to converge. This indicates a trend towards an increased accountability of international organizations due to the activity of national courts.
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