This Review Essay of Philippe Sands\u27 (ed.) From Nuremberg to the Hague (2003) explores a number of controversial aspects of the theory and praxis of international criminal law. The Review Essay traces the extant heuristic of international criminal justice institutions to Nuremberg and posits that the Nuremberg experience suggests the need for modesty about what criminal justice actually can accomplish in the wake of mass atrocity. It also explores the place of one person\u27s guilt among organic crime, the reality that international criminal law may gloss over criminogenic conditions in its pursuit of individualized accountability, the possibility of group sanction for collective violence, and the complex relationship between internation...
This article evaluates some of the theoretical and practical arguments which suggest that the potent...
A review of: Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law by Mark A. Drumbl. New York, Cambridge Univ...
This paper focuses on the problem of international criminal justice. However, since globalization re...
From Nuremberg to The Hague scours the institutions of international criminal justice in order to ex...
Despite the growth in international criminal courts and tribunals, the majority of cases concerning ...
In the wake of increasing globalization over the past fifty years, international criminal law has tr...
This Article develops a pluralistic account of substantive international criminal law (ICL). Challen...
This essay details the accomplishments and shortcomings of the International Criminal Tribunals and ...
Debates about pluralism are all the rage in international criminal scholarship. Whereas a mere twent...
International criminal law (“ICL”) is legally plural, not a single unified body of norms. As a whole...
Over the last two decades, international criminal procedure has become a recognized body of law, wit...
This article is a book review of two edited volumes: Diversification and Fragmentation of Internatio...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This work is a concerted attempt to achieve an informed interpolation between ethics, politics and l...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
This article evaluates some of the theoretical and practical arguments which suggest that the potent...
A review of: Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law by Mark A. Drumbl. New York, Cambridge Univ...
This paper focuses on the problem of international criminal justice. However, since globalization re...
From Nuremberg to The Hague scours the institutions of international criminal justice in order to ex...
Despite the growth in international criminal courts and tribunals, the majority of cases concerning ...
In the wake of increasing globalization over the past fifty years, international criminal law has tr...
This Article develops a pluralistic account of substantive international criminal law (ICL). Challen...
This essay details the accomplishments and shortcomings of the International Criminal Tribunals and ...
Debates about pluralism are all the rage in international criminal scholarship. Whereas a mere twent...
International criminal law (“ICL”) is legally plural, not a single unified body of norms. As a whole...
Over the last two decades, international criminal procedure has become a recognized body of law, wit...
This article is a book review of two edited volumes: Diversification and Fragmentation of Internatio...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This work is a concerted attempt to achieve an informed interpolation between ethics, politics and l...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
This article evaluates some of the theoretical and practical arguments which suggest that the potent...
A review of: Atrocity, Punishment, and International Law by Mark A. Drumbl. New York, Cambridge Univ...
This paper focuses on the problem of international criminal justice. However, since globalization re...