Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and institutional framework that ensures effective collective action with a view to defending fundamental values of the international community and to solving common global problems, in line with the universalist vision of international law. Envisioning the construction of an international public order means considering that this framework, which embraces and promotes the respect for human rights focused particularly on human dignity, is consolidating and evolving based on the International Criminal Court (ICC). The establishment of the ICC added an international punitive perennial facet to international humanitarian law and international human rights ...
When the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002, States, NGOs, and the internati...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and instit...
The international criminal court is the newest would-be global institution to have been established ...
On 17 July 1998 the International Criminal Court Statute was adopted in Rome by the United Nations D...
Judicial decisions of the International Criminal Court and other international criminal tribunals no...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
Due to the fact that no work of this size could address every aspect of the Rome Statute, this study...
In 1998, the Rome Statute established the International Criminal Court (ICC) to end impunity for vio...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
This paper contains the effort of the world civilization and needs of formation of permanent Interna...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has been established with the hope to help put an end to the ...
The principle of individual criminal responsibility evidences the recognition by the international c...
In the summer of 1998, the world community gathered in Rome for a major diplomatic conference sponso...
When the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002, States, NGOs, and the internati...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and instit...
The international criminal court is the newest would-be global institution to have been established ...
On 17 July 1998 the International Criminal Court Statute was adopted in Rome by the United Nations D...
Judicial decisions of the International Criminal Court and other international criminal tribunals no...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
Due to the fact that no work of this size could address every aspect of the Rome Statute, this study...
In 1998, the Rome Statute established the International Criminal Court (ICC) to end impunity for vio...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
This paper contains the effort of the world civilization and needs of formation of permanent Interna...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has been established with the hope to help put an end to the ...
The principle of individual criminal responsibility evidences the recognition by the international c...
In the summer of 1998, the world community gathered in Rome for a major diplomatic conference sponso...
When the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002, States, NGOs, and the internati...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...