International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing strong international institutions that develop the law progressively and enforce it independently. Political realists counter that such institutions are only as useful as powerful states permit them to be, and discourage expansive visions of their mandate. Partisans of the recently created International Criminal Court (ICC) must come to terms with the realist challenge. They must work to adapt the institution accordingly, without abandoning hope for the project altogether. Although the ICC will be constrained by the state support it commands, it can make a difference in the enforcement of human rights law by encouraging and assisting nationa...
The International Criminal Court is one of the great international institutions in mankind’s history...
Civil conflicts marked by human rights violations leave devastated communities in their wake. The in...
United States courts have only incomplete and uneven jurisdiction, most acquired piecemeal and only ...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
In the summer of 1998, the world community gathered in Rome for a major diplomatic conference sponso...
It cannot be overemphasized how historic the negotiations to establish a permanent International Cri...
Current opinion pieces ask broad questions such as Is the ICC worth it while only focusing on a sp...
When the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002, States, NGOs, and the internati...
Whereas in 1920 there was the solitary Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ), today there ...
The institutional arrangements for the promotion of peace, truth, justice, reparation and reconcilia...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) seems to have finally realized the ending legal globalists ha...
This article discusses an important paradox in international criminal law enforcement. On the one ha...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
The Article focuses on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the commitment of states through ICC ...
The International Criminal Court is one of the great international institutions in mankind’s history...
Civil conflicts marked by human rights violations leave devastated communities in their wake. The in...
United States courts have only incomplete and uneven jurisdiction, most acquired piecemeal and only ...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
In the summer of 1998, the world community gathered in Rome for a major diplomatic conference sponso...
It cannot be overemphasized how historic the negotiations to establish a permanent International Cri...
Current opinion pieces ask broad questions such as Is the ICC worth it while only focusing on a sp...
When the International Criminal Court (ICC) was established in 2002, States, NGOs, and the internati...
Whereas in 1920 there was the solitary Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ), today there ...
The institutional arrangements for the promotion of peace, truth, justice, reparation and reconcilia...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) seems to have finally realized the ending legal globalists ha...
This article discusses an important paradox in international criminal law enforcement. On the one ha...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
The Article focuses on the International Criminal Court (ICC), the commitment of states through ICC ...
The International Criminal Court is one of the great international institutions in mankind’s history...
Civil conflicts marked by human rights violations leave devastated communities in their wake. The in...
United States courts have only incomplete and uneven jurisdiction, most acquired piecemeal and only ...