However, the case’s firm grounding in international law, and the clear connection between a category of cultural-property crimes and attempts at cultural erasure, challenges the notion that these are second-rate crimes. The case reinforces the legal principle that attacks on culture, like attacks against people, constitute war crimes subject to international criminal prosecution. The Al Mahdi case will be significant in determining how the international community should best deal with such abhorrent attacks in the future
In the International Criminal Court case of The Prosecutor v. Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, neither the Pr...
Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, also known as Abou Tourab, was a member of the radical Islamic group Ansar E...
For decades, parties to conflicts have used the cover of war to destroy and loot cultural property a...
However, the case’s firm grounding in international law, and the clear connection between a category...
Cultural property has been destroyed, looted and trafficked throughout history, particularly during ...
This essay refracts the criminal conviction and reparations order of the International Criminal Cour...
Cultural aggression has become a strategy to obtain an advantage during war. In a deliberate and met...
Across the world, cultural property has come under heavy fire in the midst of war. The proliferation...
On 3 March 2016, Ahmad al‐Faqi al‐Mahdi sat in a courtroom at the International Criminal Court (ICC)...
The article begins with a brief overview of the contemporary international criminal law regime gover...
The cultural heritage should be protected all the time. None of the high contracting parties in the ...
In September of 2016, Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi was convicted in the International Criminal Court (“ICC...
This article examines the role that international criminal justice plays, firstly in creating histor...
Executive Summary On 23 March 2021 the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal...
In recent years, armed conflicts around the world have occasioned widespread destruction of cultural...
In the International Criminal Court case of The Prosecutor v. Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, neither the Pr...
Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, also known as Abou Tourab, was a member of the radical Islamic group Ansar E...
For decades, parties to conflicts have used the cover of war to destroy and loot cultural property a...
However, the case’s firm grounding in international law, and the clear connection between a category...
Cultural property has been destroyed, looted and trafficked throughout history, particularly during ...
This essay refracts the criminal conviction and reparations order of the International Criminal Cour...
Cultural aggression has become a strategy to obtain an advantage during war. In a deliberate and met...
Across the world, cultural property has come under heavy fire in the midst of war. The proliferation...
On 3 March 2016, Ahmad al‐Faqi al‐Mahdi sat in a courtroom at the International Criminal Court (ICC)...
The article begins with a brief overview of the contemporary international criminal law regime gover...
The cultural heritage should be protected all the time. None of the high contracting parties in the ...
In September of 2016, Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi was convicted in the International Criminal Court (“ICC...
This article examines the role that international criminal justice plays, firstly in creating histor...
Executive Summary On 23 March 2021 the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal...
In recent years, armed conflicts around the world have occasioned widespread destruction of cultural...
In the International Criminal Court case of The Prosecutor v. Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, neither the Pr...
Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi, also known as Abou Tourab, was a member of the radical Islamic group Ansar E...
For decades, parties to conflicts have used the cover of war to destroy and loot cultural property a...