Abstract:
This Essay aims to start a conversation on a novel institutional solution to the problem that de facto (not de jure) there is today no forum in which foreign plaintiffs can obtain enforceable judgments against American corporations that commit mass torts overseas. That solution is the establishment of an International Court of Civil Justice (ICCJ).
The Essay starts by describing what the author refers to as “the problem of the missing forum” – the global absence of an effective court for cross-border mass torts. It then provides a blueprint for an ICCJ. In so doing, it explains why an ICCJ is politically viable and may, specifically, appeal to rather than repel corporate America.
Steinitz, Maya, The Case for an International Court of Civil Justice. Stanford Law Review Online, forthcoming; U Iowa Legal Studies Research Paper No 14-30.
First posted 2014-11-07 09:20:16
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