Protecting victims and punishing perpetrators are now seen as integral elements of the implementation and enforcement of humanitarian norms. However, how international law constructs the victims and perpetrators of international crimes as entities with rights and duties remains insufficiently examined. This paper explores the different models of victims and perpetrators as legal persons in international criminal law. It argues that the legal person takes two forms: the victim of human rights and the perpetrator of criminal responsibility. While the legal regime presents these as autonomous and singular individuals, it also constitutes them as members of groups that criminal norms seek to protect or punish. Contemporary international crimina...
This book argues that the expressivist justice model provides a meaningful foundation for the partic...
International criminal law has struggled in the last thirty years or so to come up with a doctrinall...
This article develops a victimological perspective on international criminal justice, based on a rev...
This article examines the link between international judicial fora and social development: namely, t...
In early 2006, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights called for more detailed researc...
This book examines the concept of individual criminal responsibility for serious violations of inter...
Since its inception, the United Nations has adopted two General Assembly resolutions dealing with th...
The courts of criminal jurisdiction at the national and international levels in the past did not bes...
For long the plight of victims of gross violations of human rights has been ignored because of legal...
"In the past couple of decades an autonomous international system of law has aggressively developed ...
This Article proceeds as follows. Part I discusses the emerging norms regarding victims\u27 rights i...
This thesis critically examines the role, scope and implications of victims' participation in intern...
1 Victims of the Gravest Crimes: The Role of Victims in Legal Proceedings Before the International C...
The defense of personal dignity and rights of the victim is envisaged in many universal and regional...
The recognition of individual criminal responsibility under international law is relatively recent. ...
This book argues that the expressivist justice model provides a meaningful foundation for the partic...
International criminal law has struggled in the last thirty years or so to come up with a doctrinall...
This article develops a victimological perspective on international criminal justice, based on a rev...
This article examines the link between international judicial fora and social development: namely, t...
In early 2006, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights called for more detailed researc...
This book examines the concept of individual criminal responsibility for serious violations of inter...
Since its inception, the United Nations has adopted two General Assembly resolutions dealing with th...
The courts of criminal jurisdiction at the national and international levels in the past did not bes...
For long the plight of victims of gross violations of human rights has been ignored because of legal...
"In the past couple of decades an autonomous international system of law has aggressively developed ...
This Article proceeds as follows. Part I discusses the emerging norms regarding victims\u27 rights i...
This thesis critically examines the role, scope and implications of victims' participation in intern...
1 Victims of the Gravest Crimes: The Role of Victims in Legal Proceedings Before the International C...
The defense of personal dignity and rights of the victim is envisaged in many universal and regional...
The recognition of individual criminal responsibility under international law is relatively recent. ...
This book argues that the expressivist justice model provides a meaningful foundation for the partic...
International criminal law has struggled in the last thirty years or so to come up with a doctrinall...
This article develops a victimological perspective on international criminal justice, based on a rev...