This publication succeeds previously published seminars of the Max
Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law
(Heidelberg, Germany) dealing with evolving principles and new
developments in international law. Due to the limits of traditional
dispute settlement in international law and the ongoing scholarly debate
on those limits, it focuses on possible innovations and functional
approaches to improve international dispute settlement mechanisms. In
doing so, it covers a wide variety of topics such as procedures of the
WTO, advisory opinions of international courts and tribunals, the
privatization of international dispute settlement, the interaction
between counsels and international courts and tribunals, and the
law-making function of international courts. The aim of this publication
is to contribute to the cross-fertilization between these mechanisms and
to offer creative impulses for the promotion of international dispute
settlement.