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English
Cambridge University Press
13 November 2025
The jurisprudence of international administrative tribunals holds great relevance for international organisations, as seen in the proliferation of these tribunals, the complexity of their jurisprudence, and their practical impact. This book provides a comprehensive and accessible analysis of essential topics in this field, including applicable sources, jurisdiction and admissibility, grounds for review, equality and non-discrimination, and remedies. It also covers key emerging issues, such as the rights of non-staff personnel, the growing application of international human rights law by tribunals, and the protection of acquired rights. Drawing on thousands of decisions, this book is an invaluable resource for both practitioners and scholars. For practitioners, it offers a practical guide to navigating complex cases. For scholars, it highlights common principles and key divergences across the jurisprudence of some thirty tribunals, at the same time illuminating the increasingly sophisticated interplay between international administrative law and public international law.
By:   , , ,
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Weight:   995g
ISBN:   9781316517307
ISBN 10:   1316517306
Pages:   410
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. The changing landscape of international administrative law; 2. The institutional evolution of International Administrative Tribunals; 3. Sources of law; 4. Receivability of a complaint (jurisdiction and admissibility); 5. Procedural grounds of review; 6. Substantive grounds of review; 7. Equality and non-discrimination; 8. Remedies; 9. Selected issues: reference to international human rights instruments in the jurisprudence of International Administrative Tribunals; 10. Selected issues: access to justice for non-staff personnel in the UN system; 11. Selected issues: unilateral amendment of terms and conditions of service: the protection of acquired Rights; Bibliography.

Asier Garrido Muñoz has been a Lecturer in Public International and European Union Law at The Hague University of Applied Sciences since 2020. Previously, he served as an Associate Legal Officer at the International Court of Justice (2015-2019) and at the Registry Legal Office of the International Criminal Court (2023), where he worked on matters of international administrative law. He holds a Ph.D. in Law from the University of Salamanca, where he was an Assistant Professor in Public International Law from 2011 to 2015. Jason Morgan-Foster is a Secretary of the Court at the International Court of Justice, where he served as chairperson of the Conciliation Committee (2015-2018) and was closely involved in the reform of the Court's internal justice mechanisms (2016-2019). He previously worked for the secretariat of the United Nations Administrative Tribunal. Daniel Peat is Assistant Professor of International Law at Leiden University, where he also directs the Leiden International Administrative Law Clinic. His first monograph, Comparative Reasoning in International Courts & Tribunals (CUP 2019), was awarded the best monograph prize of the European Society of International Law (ESIL) in 2020. He was elected a member of the Board of ESIL in 2022, and was previously a member of the Editorial Board of the Leiden Journal of International Law.

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