When the relevance or, practice of international tribunals is impugned their tendency often is to resort to ‘vivere-existential reflexes’. This habit can incubate conflict between the particular tribunal and the requirements of General Principles of Law recognized by civilized nations. This risks disunity between international law, supranational law and domestic law. This article examines the International Criminal Court’s (icc) application and interpretation of Article 87 of the Rome Statute (1998) under the light of nemo judex in parte sua – a general principle of law recognized by civilized nations. The article recommends that an observatory for monitoring International Tribunals’ compliance with general principles of law recognized by c...
This Article demonstrates the disadvantages of permitting a supranational institution like the Inter...
The chapters in this book are reworkings of presentations given during a conference held in 2018 at ...
(Excerpt) The Article proceeds in four parts. Part I introduces the Rome Statute’s provision on null...
On 17 July 1998 the International Criminal Court Statute was adopted in Rome by the United Nations D...
This paper highlights some of the inherent bottlenecks in the exercise of ICC jurisdiction that may ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
La jurisprudence de la Cour a été commentée et comparée à celle des tribunaux ad'hoc par de nombreux...
As the International Criminal Court (ICC) moves from an exhilarating idea to a carefully negotiated ...
Unpublished articleThe quest for a permanent international criminal court began long before the Unit...
General principles of law are a primary mechanism for “gap-filling” in international criminal law. H...
One of the most ambitious goals of the International Criminal Court is to balance the ideal of endin...
This Note will examine problems that arise from the language of the Rome Statute itself. Part II wil...
There was a long path to the establishment of a permanent international criminal tribunal, from 1474...
CITATION: Kemp, G. 2008. Constitutionalization and the International Criminal Court : whither indivi...
How ought the International Criminal Court act with respect to specific procedural due process princ...
This Article demonstrates the disadvantages of permitting a supranational institution like the Inter...
The chapters in this book are reworkings of presentations given during a conference held in 2018 at ...
(Excerpt) The Article proceeds in four parts. Part I introduces the Rome Statute’s provision on null...
On 17 July 1998 the International Criminal Court Statute was adopted in Rome by the United Nations D...
This paper highlights some of the inherent bottlenecks in the exercise of ICC jurisdiction that may ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
La jurisprudence de la Cour a été commentée et comparée à celle des tribunaux ad'hoc par de nombreux...
As the International Criminal Court (ICC) moves from an exhilarating idea to a carefully negotiated ...
Unpublished articleThe quest for a permanent international criminal court began long before the Unit...
General principles of law are a primary mechanism for “gap-filling” in international criminal law. H...
One of the most ambitious goals of the International Criminal Court is to balance the ideal of endin...
This Note will examine problems that arise from the language of the Rome Statute itself. Part II wil...
There was a long path to the establishment of a permanent international criminal tribunal, from 1474...
CITATION: Kemp, G. 2008. Constitutionalization and the International Criminal Court : whither indivi...
How ought the International Criminal Court act with respect to specific procedural due process princ...
This Article demonstrates the disadvantages of permitting a supranational institution like the Inter...
The chapters in this book are reworkings of presentations given during a conference held in 2018 at ...
(Excerpt) The Article proceeds in four parts. Part I introduces the Rome Statute’s provision on null...