This volume presents an overview of the principal features of the legacy of International Tribunals and an assessment of their impact on the International Criminal Court and on the review process of the Rome Statute. It illustrates the foundation of a system of international criminal law and justice through the case-law and practices of the UN ad hoc tribunals and other internationally assisted tribunals and courts. These examples provide advice for possible future developments in international criminal procedure and law, with particular reference to their impact on the ICC and on national jurisdictions. The review process of the Rome Statute is approached as a step of a review process to provide a perspective of the developments in the field since the Statute’s adoption in 1998.
The history of international criminal justice told through the revealing stories of some of its primary intellectual figures.
This collection identifies and discusses problems and opportunities for the theory and practice of international criminal justice.
This book explores the gaps, schisms, and contradictions that are increasingly defining the International Criminal Court, moving beyond existing legal, international relations, and political accounts of the ICC to analyse the Court from a ...
ÔInternational criminal justice indeed is a crowded field. But this edited collection stands well above the crowd. And it does so with dignity. Through interdisciplinary analysis, the editors skillfully turn shibboleths into intrigues.
8) Mark J. Findlay, Governing through Globalised Crime: Futures for International Criminal Justice (Willan, Cullompton, 2008). 9) Alexander Zahar and Goran Sluiter, International Criminal Law: A Critical Introduction (Oxford University ...
... Milano-Bicocca University Christine Chinkin Professor of International Law, London School of Economics Annalisa ... of Comparative Legal Studies and Internationalization of Law, Collège de France Mélanie Deshaies Research Assistant, ...
This collection discusses appropriate methodologies for comparative research and applies this to the issue of trial transformation in the context of achieving justice in post-conflict societies.
Written by one of the world's pioneers and leading authorities on international criminal law, this text book covers the history, nature, and sources of international criminal law; the ratione personae; ratione materiae--sources of ...
To make this argument, I provide a brief description of adversarial and nonadversarial procedures. Criminal proceedings in an adversarial system are structured in the form of a contest between the defendant and the state.
This new edition of market-leading textbook contains both updated and new material to give the most current coverage of the subject.