An Introduction to International Criminal Law and Procedure

Höfundur Darryl Robinson; Sergey Vasiliev; Elies van Sliedregt; Valerie Oosterveld

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781009466615

Útgáfa 5

Útgáfuár 2024

7.090 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half title
  • Reviews
  • Title page
  • Imprints page
  • Dedication
  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • Preface to the Fifth Edition
  • Table of International Cases
  • Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
  • European Court of Human Rights
  • European Court of Justice
  • Extraordinary African Chambers
  • Human Rights Committee
  • Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
  • Inter-American Court of Human Rights
  • International Criminal Court
  • International Court of Justice
  • International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (and the International Residual Mechanism)
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (and the International Residual Mechanism)
  • International Military Tribunals
  • Kosovo Specialist Chambers and Kosovo Specialist Prosecutor’s Office
  • Gucati and Haradinaj (KSC-BC-2020–07)
  • Salih Mustafa (KSC-BC-2020–05)
  • Hashim Thaçi, Kadri Veseli, Rexhep Selimi, and Jakup Krasniqi (KSC-BC-2020–06)
  • Permanent Court of International Justice
  • Residual Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Special Court for Sierra Leone
  • Special Criminal Court for Central African Republic
  • Special Panels for Serious Crimes (East Timor)
  • Special Tribunal for Lebanon
  • Table of National Cases
  • Argentina
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Cambodia
  • Canada
  • Chile
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Iraq
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Netherlands
  • Norway
  • Peru
  • South Africa
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
  • Abbreviations
  • Abbreviations of Book Titles
  • Part I Introduction
  • 1 Introduction: What Is International Criminal Law?
  • 1.1 Meaning of International Criminal Law
  • 1.2 Other Concepts of International Criminal Law
  • 1.2.1 Transnational Criminal Law
  • 1.2.2 International Criminal Law As a Set of Rules to Protect the Values of the International Order
  • 1.2.3 Involvement of a State
  • 1.2.4 Crimes Created by International Law
  • 1.3 Sources of International Criminal Law
  • 1.3.1 Treaties
  • 1.3.2 Customary International Law
  • 1.3.3 General Principles of Law and Subsidiary Means of Determining the Law
  • 1.4 International Criminal Law and Other Areas of Law
  • 1.4.1 International Criminal Law and Human Rights Law
  • 1.4.2 International Criminal Law and International Humanitarian Law
  • 1.4.3 International Criminal Law and State Responsibility
  • 1.5 A Body of Criminal Law
  • 1.5.1 Nullum Crimen Sine Lege
  • 1.5.2 Nulla Poena Sine Lege
  • 1.6 International Criminal Law and Legal Theory
  • 1.6.1 International Criminal Law and the International Legal Theory
  • 1.6.2 International Criminal Law and the Theory of Criminal Law
  • 1.6.3 A Separate (?) Theory of International Criminal Law
  • Further Reading
  • 2 The Aims, Objectives, and Justifications of International Criminal Law
  • 2.1 Introduction
  • 2.2 What International Criminal Justice Is For
  • 2.2.1 Retribution
  • 2.2.2 Deterrence
  • 2.2.3 Incapacitation
  • 2.2.4 Rehabilitation
  • 2.2.5 Expressivist and Didactic Function
  • 2.3 Other Goals
  • 2.3.1 Vindicating the Rights of Victims
  • 2.3.2 Recording History
  • 2.3.3 Post-Conflict Reconciliation
  • 2.3.4 Other Asserted Benefits of International Trials
  • 2.4 Other Critiques of Criminal Accountability
  • Further Reading
  • Part II Prosecutions in National Courts
  • 3 Jurisdiction
  • 3.1 Introduction
  • 3.2 Forms of Jurisdiction
  • 3.2.1 Legislative Jurisdiction
  • 3.2.2 Adjudicative Jurisdiction
  • 3.2.3 Executive Jurisdiction
  • 3.3 Conceptual Matters
  • 3.3.1 Question of Proof
  • 3.3.2 Treaties and Jurisdiction
  • 3.4 Traditional Heads of Jurisdiction
  • 3.4.1 Territoriality Principle
  • 3.4.2 Nationality Principle
  • 3.4.3 Passive Personality Principle
  • 3.4.4 Protective Principle
  • 3.5 Universal Jurisdiction
  • 3.5.1 Introduction
  • 3.5.2 Approaches to Universal Jurisdiction
  • 3.5.3 Rise of Universal Jurisdiction
  • 3.5.4 Retrenchment of Universal Jurisdiction?
  • The Yerodia Case
  • Limiting Universality
  • The Expansion of Universal Jurisdiction
  • 3.5.5 Universal Jurisdiction’s Practical Problems
  • 3.5.6 Policy-Based and Political Criticisms of Universal Jurisdiction
  • Further Reading
  • 4 National Prosecutions of International Crimes
  • 4.1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Overview of Practice
  • 4.3 State Obligations to Prosecute or Extradite
  • 4.3.1 Treaty Obligations
  • 4.3.2 Human Rights Law Obligations
  • 4.3.3 Customary Law Obligations?
  • 4.4 Domestic Criminal Law and Jurisdiction
  • 4.4.1 Domestic Legislation
  • 4.4.2 ICC As a Catalyst for Domestic Legislation
  • 4.4.3 Impact of Domestic and International Case Law
  • 4.5 Statutory Limitations
  • 4.6 Non-Retroactivity
  • 4.7 Ne Bis in Idem or Double Jeopardy
  • 4.7.1 Application between States
  • 4.7.2 Application vis-à-vis International Criminal Jurisdictions
  • 4.8 Political and Practical Obstacles
  • Further Reading
  • 5 State Cooperation with Respect to National Proceedings
  • 5.1 Introduction
  • 5.2 International Agreements and Other Bases of Cooperation
  • 5.3 Basic Features
  • 5.3.1 Traditional Assistance and ‘Mutual Recognition’
  • 5.3.2 Double Criminality, Rule of Speciality, and Statutory Limitations
  • 5.3.3 Ne Bis in Idem or Double Jeopardy
  • 5.3.4 Human Rights and Legal Cooperation
  • 5.4 Extradition
  • 5.4.1 Extradition Agreements and the European Arrest Warrant
  • 5.4.2 Extradition Procedures
  • 5.4.3 Extraditable and Non-Extraditable Offences
  • 5.4.4 Non-Extradition of Nationals
  • 5.4.5 Death Penalty, Life Imprisonment, and Other Human Rights Grounds
  • 5.4.6 Re-Extradition
  • 5.4.7 Abduction, Rendition, or Expulsion
  • 5.5 Mutual Legal Assistance
  • 5.6 Transfer of Proceedings
  • 5.7 Enforcement of Penalties
  • Further Reading
  • Part III International Prosecution
  • 6 The History of International Criminal Prosecutions: Nuremberg and Tokyo
  • 6.1 Introduction
  • 6.2 1919 Commission on the Responsibility of the Authors of the War
  • 6.3 Nuremberg International Military Tribunal
  • 6.3.1 Creation of the Tribunal
  • 6.3.2 The Tribunal and the Trial
  • 6.3.3 Assessment of the Nuremberg IMT
  • 6.4 Tokyo International Military Tribunal
  • 6.4.1 Creation of the Tribunal
  • 6.4.2 The Tribunal and the Trial
  • 6.4.3 Assessment of the Tribunal
  • 6.5 Control Council Law No. 10 Trials and Military Commissions in the Pacific Sphere
  • Further Reading
  • 7 The Ad Hoc International Criminal Tribunals
  • 7.1 Introduction
  • 7.2 International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • 7.2.1 Creation of the ICTY
  • 7.2.2 Structure of the ICTY
  • 7.2.3 Jurisdiction of the ICTY and Its Relationship to National Courts
  • 7.2.4 Milestones in the Practice of the ICTY
  • Beginnings and the Tadić Case
  • Kosovo, Milošević, and NATO
  • Completion Strategy and the Process of Closing Down
  • 7.2.5 Appraisal of the ICTY
  • 7.3 International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
  • 7.3.1 Creation of the ICTR
  • 7.3.2 Structure of the ICTR
  • 7.3.3 Jurisdiction of the ICTR and Its Relationship to National Courts
  • 7.3.4 Practice of the ICTR
  • Troubles at the Start
  • Moving Forward
  • Completion Strategy and the Process of Winding Down
  • 7.3.5 Appraisal of the ICTR
  • Further Reading
  • 8 The International Criminal Court
  • 8.1 Introduction
  • 8.2 Creation of the ICC
  • 8.3 Structure and Composition of the ICC
  • 8.4 Crimes within the Jurisdiction of the ICC
  • 8.5 Jurisdiction
  • 8.5.1 Personal and Territorial Jurisdiction
  • Territorial and Active Nationality Jurisdiction
  • How States Accept Jurisdiction
  • Security Council Referrals
  • 8.5.2 Temporal Jurisdiction
  • 8.5.3 Persons Over the Age of Eighteen
  • 8.6 How the Court Works: An Overview
  • 8.6.1 ‘Trigger Mechanisms’: Initiating Proceedings
  • State Party Referrals
  • Security Council Referrals
  • Initiation by the Prosecutor
  • 8.6.2 Deferral by the Security Council: Article 16
  • 8.6.3 Preliminary Examination, Investigation, and Prosecution
  • 8.7 Complementarity
  • 8.7.1 First Step: Are There Proceedings at the National Level?
  • 8.7.2 Second Step: Unwillingness or Inability to Carry Out Proceedings Genuinely
  • 8.7.3 What Is a ‘Case’?
  • 8.7.4 Encouraging National Proceedings
  • 8.8 Gravity
  • 8.9 Interests of Justice
  • 8.10 Cooperation
  • 8.11 Opposition to the ICC
  • 8.11.1 United States
  • 8.11.2 African Union
  • 8.12 Appraisal
  • Further Reading
  • 9 Other Hybrid and Special Courts
  • 9.1 Introduction
  • 9.2 Courts Established by Agreement between a State and an International Organization or between States
  • 9.2.1 Special Court for Sierra Leone and Residual Special Court
  • 9.2.2 Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
  • 9.2.3 Special Tribunal for Lebanon
  • 9.2.4 Extraordinary African Chambers
  • 9.2.5 African Criminal Court: Towards a Regional Jurisdiction
  • 9.3 Courts Established by International Administration
  • 9.3.1 Special Panels for Serious Crimes in Kosovo and East Timor
  • Kosovo
  • East Timor
  • 9.3.2 War Crimes Chamber in the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • 9.4 Courts Established by a State with International Support
  • 9.4.1 Iraqi High Tribunal
  • 9.4.2 War Crimes Departments in Serbia
  • 9.4.3 Kosovo Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor’s Office
  • 9.4.4 Special Criminal Court in the Central African Republic
  • 9.5 Relationship with the ICC
  • 9.6 Concluding Remarks
  • Further Reading
  • Part IV Substantive Law of International Crimes
  • 10 Genocide
  • 10.1 Introduction
  • 10.1.1 Overview
  • 10.1.2 Historical Development
  • 10.1.3 Relationship to Crimes Against Humanity
  • 10.1.4 Nature of Genocide
  • 10.2 Protected Groups
  • 10.2.1 National, Ethnic, Racial, and Religious Groups
  • 10.2.2 Identifying the Group and Its Members
  • 10.3 Material Elements
  • 10.3.1 Prohibited Acts
  • Killing
  • Causing Serious Bodily or Mental Harm to Members of the Group
  • Deliberately Inflicting on the Group Conditions of Life Calculated to Bring About Its Physical Destruction in Whole or in Part
  • Imposing Measures Intended to Prevent Births Within the Group
  • Forcibly Transferring Children of the Group to Another Group
  • 10.3.2 ‘Contextual Element’
  • 10.4 Mental Elements
  • 10.4.1 Intent
  • Proof of Special Intent
  • Intention versus Knowledge
  • 10.4.2 ‘To Destroy’
  • 10.4.3 ‘In Whole or in Part’
  • 10.4.4 ‘As Such’
  • 10.5 Other Modes of Participation
  • Further Reading
  • 11 Crimes against Humanity
  • 11.1 Introduction
  • 11.1.1 Overview
  • 11.1.2 Historical Development
  • 11.1.3 Relationship to Other Crimes
  • 11.2 Common Elements (Contextual Threshold)
  • 11.2.1 Aspects Not Required
  • No Nexus to Armed Conflict
  • No Requirement of Discriminatory Animus
  • 11.2.2 Widespread or Systematic
  • 11.2.3 Attack
  • Controversy Concerning the Policy Element
  • Divide in the Authorities
  • Implications for Jurisdictions Rejecting a Policy Element
  • Implications for Jurisdictions Requiring a Policy Element
  • State or Organization
  • 11.2.4 Any Civilian Population
  • 11.2.5 Link Between the Accused and the Attack
  • 11.2.6 Awareness of Context
  • 11.3 Prohibited Acts
  • 11.3.1 List of Prohibited Acts
  • 11.3.2 Murder
  • 11.3.3 Extermination
  • 11.3.4 Enslavement
  • 11.3.5 Deportation or Forcible Transfer
  • 11.3.6 Imprisonment
  • 11.3.7 Torture
  • 11.3.8 Rape and Other Forms of Sexual Violence
  • Rape
  • Sexual Slavery
  • Enforced Prostitution
  • Forced Pregnancy
  • Enforced Sterilization
  • Other Sexual Violence
  • 11.3.9 Persecution
  • Discriminatory Grounds
  • Severe Deprivation of Fundamental Rights
  • Gravity or Severity
  • Connection to Other Acts?
  • Mental Element
  • Relationship to Other Crimes
  • Examples of Persecutory Acts
  • 11.3.10 Enforced Disappearance
  • 11.3.11 Apartheid
  • 11.3.12 Other Inhumane Acts
  • Further Reading
  • 12 War Crimes
  • 12.1 Introduction
  • 12.1.1 Overview
  • 12.1.2 A Brief History of Humanitarian Law
  • 12.1.3 Key Principles of Humanitarian Law
  • 12.1.4 The Challenge of Regulating Warfare
  • 12.1.5 Relationship Between War Crimes and IHL
  • 12.1.6 The Evolution of War Crimes Law
  • 12.1.7 War Crimes in Non-International Armed Conflicts
  • 12.2 Common Issues
  • 12.2.1 Armed Conflict
  • 12.2.2 Distinguishing Between International and Non-International Conflicts
  • Invitation
  • Wars of National Liberation
  • Proxy Forces
  • Transnational Conflict
  • 12.2.3 Distinguishing Armed Conflict from Riots and Disturbances
  • 12.2.4 Nexus Between Conduct and Conflict
  • 12.2.5 Perpetrator
  • 12.2.6 Victim or Object of the Crime
  • 12.2.7 ‘Jurisdictional’ Threshold in the ICC Statute
  • 12.3 Specific Offences
  • 12.3.1 Lists of War Crimes in the Statutes of the Tribunals and the ICC
  • 12.3.2 Crimes Against Non-Combatants
  • Violence and Mistreatment
  • Other Legal Interests of Protected Persons
  • 12.3.3 Attacks on Prohibited Targets (Principle of Distinction)
  • 12.3.4 Attacks Inflicting Excessive Civilian Damage
  • Principle of Proportionality
  • First Side of the Equation: Harm to Civilians, Civilian Objects, and the Environment
  • Second Side of the Equation: Military Advantage
  • Comparing the Two Sides of the Equation: Proportionality Test
  • Mental Element
  • 12.3.5 War Crimes Against Property
  • 12.3.6 Prohibited Means of Warfare (Weapons)
  • 12.3.7 Prohibited Methods of Warfare
  • 12.3.8 War Crime Provisions Protecting Other Values
  • Transfer of Population into Occupied Territory
  • Child Soldiers
  • Further Reading
  • 13 Aggression
  • 13.1 Introduction and History: Criminalizing Aggression
  • 13.1.1 Overview
  • 13.1.2 Historical Development
  • International Criminal Court Negotiations
  • 13.1.3 Definition in the ICC Statute
  • 13.1.4 Relationship to Other Crimes
  • 13.2 Material Elements
  • 13.2.1 Perpetrators
  • 13.2.2 Planning, Preparation, Initiation, or Execution
  • 13.2.3 Act of Aggression
  • International Law Regarding the Use of Force by a State
  • Self-Defence
  • Authorization under Chapter VII
  • Humanitarian Intervention
  • 13.2.4 ‘A Manifest Violation of the UN Charter’
  • 13.3 Mental Elements
  • 13.4 Prosecution of Aggression in the ICC
  • 13.4.1 Jurisdiction of the ICC
  • 13.4.2 The Role of the Security Council
  • 13.4.3 Implications of the Prosecution of Aggression Before the ICC
  • Further Reading
  • 14 Other International Crime: Terrorism, Torture, and Ecocide
  • 14.1 Introduction
  • 14.1.1 Overview
  • 14.2 Terrorism
  • 14.2.1 Introduction
  • 14.2.2 Development of International Cooperation Against Terrorism
  • Global Counter-Terrorism Agreements
  • Regional Counter-Terrorism Agreements
  • Security Council Resolutions
  • 14.2.3 Definition of Terrorism
  • Material Elements
  • Mental Elements
  • 14.2.4 Prosecution and Other National Measures
  • 14.2.5 Terrorism As an International Crime
  • Terrorism As a War Crime
  • Terrorism as a Crime Against Humanity
  • A Customary Law Definition of an International Crime of Terrorism?
  • 14.3 Torture
  • 14.3.1 Introduction
  • 14.3.2 UN Convention Against Torture
  • Material Elements
  • Mental Elements
  • 14.3.3 Prosecution and Other National Measures
  • 14.3.4 Torture As an International Crime
  • 14.4 Ecocide
  • Further Reading
  • 15 General Principles of Liability
  • 15.1 Introduction
  • 15.2 Perpetration/Commission
  • 15.2.1 Joint Criminal Enterprise
  • Actus Reus
  • Mens Rea
  • Nature of Joint Criminal Enterprise Liability
  • 15.2.2 Co-perpetration
  • Actus Reus
  • Mens Rea
  • 15.2.3 Indirect Perpetration/Perpetration Through Another Person
  • 15.2.4 Indirect Co-perpetration
  • 15.3 Aiding and Abetting
  • 15.4 Ordering, Instigating, Soliciting, Inducing, and Inciting
  • 15.4.1 Ordering
  • 15.4.2 Instigating, Soliciting, Inducing, and Inciting
  • 15.5 Common Purpose Liability
  • 15.6 Planning, Preparation, Attempt, and Conspiracy
  • 15.6.1 Planning and Preparing
  • 15.6.2 Attempt
  • 15.6.3 Conspiracy
  • 15.7 Command/Superior Responsibility
  • 15.7.1 Superior/Subordinate Relationship
  • 15.7.2 Mental Element
  • 15.7.3 Failure to Take Measures
  • 15.7.4 Causation
  • 15.7.5 Nature of Superior Responsibility
  • 15.8 Mental Elements
  • Further Reading
  • 16 Defences/Grounds for Excluding Criminal Responsibility
  • 16.1 Introduction
  • 16.1.1 Types of Defences
  • 16.2 ICC Statute and Defences
  • 16.3 Mental Incapacity
  • 16.4 Intoxication
  • 16.4.1 Voluntary and Involuntary Intoxication
  • 16.4.2 Destruction of Capacity
  • 16.4.3 A Complete Defence
  • 16.5 Self-Defence, Defence of Others, and of Property
  • 16.5.1 Imminent, Unlawful Use of Force
  • 16.5.2 Reasonable and Proportionate Response
  • 16.6 Duress and Necessity
  • 16.6.1 Imminent Threat Beyond the Control of the Accused
  • 16.6.2 Necessary and Reasonable Actions
  • 16.6.3 Causation
  • 16.7 Mistake of Fact and Law
  • 16.7.1 Mistake of Fact
  • 16.7.2 Mistake of Law
  • 16.8 Superior Orders
  • 16.8.1 Obligation to Obey
  • 16.8.2 Knowledge of Unlawfulness
  • 16.8.3 Manifest Illegality
  • 16.8.4 Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
  • 16.8.5 Relationship of Superior Orders to Other Defences
  • 16.9 Other Defences
  • 16.9.1 Consent
  • 16.9.2 Reprisals
  • 16.9.3 Military Necessity
  • Further Reading
  • Part V International Criminal Procedure and Sentencing
  • 17 International Criminal Procedure
  • 17.1 General Issues
  • 17.1.1 Legal Traditions
  • 17.1.2 International Models
  • 17.2 Actors
  • 17.2.1 Judges
  • 17.2.2 Prosecutor
  • 17.2.3 Defence
  • 17.2.4 Victims and Witnesses
  • 17.2.5 States and International Organizations
  • 17.3 Rights
  • 17.3.1 Standards
  • 17.3.2 Independence and Impartiality
  • 17.3.3 Presumption of Innocence
  • 17.3.4 Public, Fair, and Expeditious Proceedings
  • 17.4 Jurisdiction and Admissibility Procedures
  • 17.5 Investigation
  • 17.5.1 Initiation
  • 17.5.2 Conduct
  • 17.6 Coercive Measures
  • 17.6.1 Arrest and Detention
  • 17.6.2 Remedying Violations
  • 17.7 Prosecution
  • 17.7.1 Decision to Prosecute
  • 17.7.2 Indictment and Charges
  • 17.8 Pre-Trial Process
  • 17.8.1 First Appearance and Confirmation of Charges
  • 17.8.2 Preparation for Trial
  • 17.8.3 Disclosure of Evidence
  • 17.9 Evidentiary Rules
  • 17.10 Guilty Plea and Admission of Guilt
  • 17.11 Trial Stage
  • 17.12 Appeals and Review
  • 17.12.1 Appeal Against Judgment and Sentence
  • 17.12.2 Interlocutory Appeals
  • 17.12.3 Review and Revision
  • 17.13 Offences Against the Administration of Justice
  • 17.14 Concluding Remarks
  • Further Reading
  • 18 Victims in International Criminal Justice
  • 18.1 Introduction
  • 18.2 Victims and International Criminal Justice
  • 18.3 Definition of Victims
  • 18.4 Protection of Victims and Witnesses
  • 18.5 Victim Participation at the ICC
  • 18.5.1 Purposes of Participation
  • 18.5.2 Conditions for Participation
  • 18.5.3 Legal Representation
  • 18.5.4 Participation in Different Procedural Stages
  • 18.6 Reparations to Victims
  • 18.7 An Assessment
  • Further Reading
  • 19 Punishment and Sentencing
  • 19.1 International Penal Regime
  • 19.2 Purposes of Punishment
  • 19.3 Sentencing Practice
  • 19.3.1 General Approach
  • 19.3.2 Aggravating and Mitigating Circumstances
  • 19.3.3 Cumulative or Joint Sentences
  • 19.4 Sentencing Procedures
  • 19.5 Pardon, Early Release, and Review of Sentence
  • 19.6 Enforcement
  • Further Reading
  • Part VI Relationship between National and International Systems
  • 20 State Cooperation with the International Courts and Tribunals
  • 20.1 Nature of the Cooperation Regimes
  • 20.2 Obligation to Cooperate
  • 20.2.1 States
  • 20.2.2 Conflicting Obligations
  • 20.2.3 Individuals
  • 20.3 States Not Party, International Organizations, and Other Entities
  • 20.4 Authority to Seek Cooperation and Rights of Parties
  • 20.5 Arrest and Surrender
  • 20.6 Other Forms of Legal Assistance
  • 20.6.1 Grounds for Refusal
  • 20.6.2 National Security Objections
  • 20.6.3 On-Site Investigations and Trials
  • 20.6.4 Assistance Regarding Coercive Measures
  • 20.7 Domestic Implementation
  • 20.8 Non-Compliance and Enforcement
  • 20.9 Cooperation and Complementarity
  • 20.10 Concluding Remarks
  • Further Reading
  • 21 Immunities
  • 21.1 Introduction
  • 21.1.1 Overview
  • 21.1.2 Functional and Personal Immunity
  • 21.1.3 Examples of Immunities
  • 21.1.4 Underlying Rationales and Values
  • 21.2 Functional Immunity and Its Limits
  • 21.2.1 The Pinochet Precedent
  • 21.2.2 Other Authorities: No Functional Immunity for Core Crimes?
  • Authorities Indicating No Functional Immunities for Core Crimes
  • An Open Question?
  • 21.3 Personal Immunity: No Exception Based on the Crimes Alleged
  • 21.3.1 State Practice and Jurisprudence
  • 21.3.2 The Arrest Warrant decision
  • Which Ministers Enjoy Personal Immunity?
  • Are Personal Immunities Established for Private Visits?
  • 21.4 Personal Immunity: Inroads in International Courts
  • 21.4.1 Security Council Decisions and the International Tribunals
  • 21.4.2 Relinquishment Directly to the ICC
  • 21.4.3 Security Council Referrals and the ICC
  • 21.4.4 The Taylor Theory: Is Personal Immunity Irrelevant Before International Courts?
  • ‘International Courts’ Theory
  • Grounds for Scepticism about the ‘International Court’ Theory
  • The ICC Al Bashir Decision
  • 21.5 Conclusion
  • Further Reading
  • 22 Alternatives and Complements to Criminal Prosecution
  • 22.1 Introduction
  • 22.2 Amnesties
  • 22.2.1 International Law and Amnesties
  • 22.2.2 ICC and Amnesties
  • 22.2.3 Domestic Jurisdictions and Amnesties
  • 22.2.4 Appraisal of Amnesties
  • 22.3 Truth Commissions
  • 22.4 Lustration
  • 22.5 Reparations and Civil Claims
  • 22.6 Local Justice Mechanisms
  • Further Reading
  • Index
Show More

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “An Introduction to International Criminal Law and Procedure”

Netfang þitt verður ekki birt. Nauðsynlegir reitir eru merktir *

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð