It now appears likely that Thomas Lubanga Dyilo will be the first person tried before the International Criminal Court. In 2006, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the ICC authorized the issuance of a warrant of arrest for Lubanga, the leader of a military organization in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In so doing, the Pre-Trial Chamber examined the ICC Statute’s admissibility requirements for cases and held that only cases that meet a prescribed standard of “aggravated gravity” are admissible before the Court. In this article, the author argues that the Pre-Trial Chamber’s Lubanga decision will have several long-term negative consequences on the ability of the ICC to fulfill its mandate. As a direct result of the Chamber’s decision on gravity...
Followers of the International Criminal Court (ICC) interested in theories of liability were looking...
Mr. Eustace Azubuike, Research Assistant and S.J.D. Candidate, Golden Gate University School of Law
The question of the assessment of ‘sufficient gravity’ for the purpose of cases and potential cases ...
The poster seeks to critique the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) classification of the emerging...
This article offers a new perspective on the gravity notion in Article 17(1)(d) of the Statute. It ...
The poster seeks to critique the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) classification of the emergi...
On January 26, 2009, the International Criminal Court (ICC) commenced the trial of Thomas Lubanga, a...
On 29 January 2007 Pre-Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court issued the decision on th...
Gravity is an enormously important concept at the International Criminal Court (ICC). The word appea...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has had to face many objective difficulties in its initial st...
This thesis analyses the relationship between an idea and the legitimacy of an international regime....
In 2012 the international criminal court (icc) celebrates its ten-year anniversary since its establi...
This Essay analyzes the Court’s early jurisprudence interpreting the gravity threshold for admissibi...
In 2014, the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court found that war crimes alle...
Newspaper article published in Daily Nation on June 13, 2013The relationship between Kenya and the I...
Followers of the International Criminal Court (ICC) interested in theories of liability were looking...
Mr. Eustace Azubuike, Research Assistant and S.J.D. Candidate, Golden Gate University School of Law
The question of the assessment of ‘sufficient gravity’ for the purpose of cases and potential cases ...
The poster seeks to critique the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) classification of the emerging...
This article offers a new perspective on the gravity notion in Article 17(1)(d) of the Statute. It ...
The poster seeks to critique the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) classification of the emergi...
On January 26, 2009, the International Criminal Court (ICC) commenced the trial of Thomas Lubanga, a...
On 29 January 2007 Pre-Trial Chamber I of the International Criminal Court issued the decision on th...
Gravity is an enormously important concept at the International Criminal Court (ICC). The word appea...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has had to face many objective difficulties in its initial st...
This thesis analyses the relationship between an idea and the legitimacy of an international regime....
In 2012 the international criminal court (icc) celebrates its ten-year anniversary since its establi...
This Essay analyzes the Court’s early jurisprudence interpreting the gravity threshold for admissibi...
In 2014, the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court found that war crimes alle...
Newspaper article published in Daily Nation on June 13, 2013The relationship between Kenya and the I...
Followers of the International Criminal Court (ICC) interested in theories of liability were looking...
Mr. Eustace Azubuike, Research Assistant and S.J.D. Candidate, Golden Gate University School of Law
The question of the assessment of ‘sufficient gravity’ for the purpose of cases and potential cases ...