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Contents
- Preliminary Material
- Dedication
- General Editors’ Preface
- Preface Second Edition
- Contents
- Table of Cases
- Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ)
- International Court of Justice (ICJ)
- Permanent Court of Arbitration
- European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR)
- European Court of Justice (ECJ) and European Court of First Instance (CFI)
- European Commission
- WTO Appellate Body and WTO Panel
- US Supreme Court Cases
- US Federal Appeals Court Cases
- US Federal District Court Cases
- English Cases
- German Cases
- French Cases
- Dutch Cases
- Belgian Cases
- Spanish Cases
- Canadian Cases
- Israeli Cases
- List of Abbreviations
- Main Text
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Public International Law Approaches to Jurisdiction
- 2.1 The Lotus Case
- 2.2 Customary International Law
- (a) Persisting influence of Lotus
- (b) The priority of territorial jurisdiction under customary international law
- (c) Legitimate interests, foreign harm, power, and reasonableness
- (d) Relevant international law principles
- (e) Method of ascertaining customary international law
- (f) Giving effect to international jurisdictional rules in the domestic legal order
- 3 The Territoriality Principle
- 3.1 Historical Growth of the Territoriality Principle in Continental Europe
- 3.2 The Territoriality Principle in England
- 3.3 The Territoriality Principle in the United States
- 3.4 Territorial Jurisdiction over Cross-border Offenses
- 3.5 Territorial Jurisdiction and the Internet
- 3.6 Territorial Jurisdiction over Antitrust Violations
- 3.7 Territorial Jurisdiction and Securities Regulation
- 3.8 Territoriality and Orders for Discovery Abroad
- 3.9 Territorial Extension of Domestic Law
- 3.10 Concluding Observations
- 4 The Principles of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
- 5 A Reasonable Exercise of Jurisdiction
- 5.1 Comity as a Discretionary Principle of Jurisdictional Restraint
- 5.2 “Reasonable Jurisdiction” Under International Law
- 5.3 The Jurisdictional Rule of Reason of § 403 of the Restatement (Third) of US Foreign Relations Law (1987)
- 5.4 The Problematic Character of the Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as an International Law Norm or Principle
- 5.5 The Jurisdictional Rule of Reason as a Norm of International Law
- 6 A New Theory of Jurisdiction in International Law
- Further Material