Concurrency in the framework of international justice
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55716//jjps.2025.14.2.6Keywords:
synchronization, international justice, UN Security Council, international justice.Abstract
When international justice moves to resolve the cases presented to it and considered, these cases may be presented simultaneously before more than one judicial body, or they may be presented simultaneously with other international bodies that have a close relationship with these cases, as they fall within the core of their assigned jurisdiction. There are certain reasons that, if combined, achieve this synchronization. Synchronization can be either positive, compatible and harmonious between the concerned parties, or negative, the opposite. This either results in agreement between these international bodies to clearly support each other, or in conflict and contradiction between them, which leads to weakening the credibility of international justice and the natural course of international justice, such that the effect of synchronization on international justice is clear.