The protection of individuals' rights, often necessary against their own states, may sometimes also be necessary against international organizations. This is a particularly delicate matter where the international organization is meant to represent international law and justice. Drawing on the experience of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the author argues that the operations of the International Criminal Court will inevitably have a direct and significant impact on the treatment of individuals in countries that are not able or willing to stand up for their citizens' rights and interests under state laws or international law. The interface of the ICC with the ordinary state national is generally not regulated b...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and instit...
When an international criminal tribunal establishes its headquarters in a State, its legal relations...
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...
On account of the immunities which foreign State officials enjoy under international law, universal ...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) is a vital instrument of international law. While the Interna...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) norm asserts that states have duties beyond their borders to hel...
We study the role of international tribunals, like the International Criminal Court (ICC), as an eff...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) aims to promote not only justice, but also peace. It has been...
The International Criminal Court (the ICC) is one of the great international institutions in mankind...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
In 1998, the Rome Statute established the International Criminal Court (ICC) to end impunity for vio...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and instit...
When an international criminal tribunal establishes its headquarters in a State, its legal relations...
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...
On account of the immunities which foreign State officials enjoy under international law, universal ...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) is a vital instrument of international law. While the Interna...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) norm asserts that states have duties beyond their borders to hel...
We study the role of international tribunals, like the International Criminal Court (ICC), as an eff...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) aims to promote not only justice, but also peace. It has been...
The International Criminal Court (the ICC) is one of the great international institutions in mankind...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
In 1998, the Rome Statute established the International Criminal Court (ICC) to end impunity for vio...
Part I of this Note discusses the legal doctrines governing privileges and immunities of U.N. offici...
Envisioning an international public order means envisioning an order sustained by a legal and instit...
When an international criminal tribunal establishes its headquarters in a State, its legal relations...