While the question of whether international criminal courts and tribunals (ICTs) ought to write historical narratives of armed conflicts is an old one, it has gained renewed relevance in the context of the recent turn to history in international criminal law and the minimal attention paid to historical context in the first judgment of the International Criminal Court. The ‘proper’ place of history-writing in international criminal adjudication remains controversial, and even though some judges have preferred to de-emphasize it, the fact remains that ICTs are epistemic engines, systematically and inevitably producing knowledge about the conflicts that come before them. This article develops a framework for analysing the historical knowledge ...
The history of international law has recently come to the forefront of legal debates. Defined as the...
As some of the first modern-day international (-ised) ad hoc tribunals and hybrid courts have fulfil...
When created, international criminal tribunals (ICTs) were not only expected to do justice but also ...
While the question of whether international criminal courts and tribunals (ICTs) ought to write hist...
This article examines the role that international criminal justice plays, firstly in creating histor...
Several instances of war crimes trials are familiar to all scholars, but in order to advance underst...
In this engaging and accessible book, Richard Ashby Wilson addresses key questions related to the le...
Like all organizations, the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia (ICTY) has a history and ...
This chapter draws on the rich and varied jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for t...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
The task of this article is to examine the academic value and factual reliability of the reports Bac...
This article analyses the fact-finding practice of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (I...
The history of international legal institutions has largely ignored the early activities of the Unit...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
Introduction to this special issue dedicated to the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugos...
The history of international law has recently come to the forefront of legal debates. Defined as the...
As some of the first modern-day international (-ised) ad hoc tribunals and hybrid courts have fulfil...
When created, international criminal tribunals (ICTs) were not only expected to do justice but also ...
While the question of whether international criminal courts and tribunals (ICTs) ought to write hist...
This article examines the role that international criminal justice plays, firstly in creating histor...
Several instances of war crimes trials are familiar to all scholars, but in order to advance underst...
In this engaging and accessible book, Richard Ashby Wilson addresses key questions related to the le...
Like all organizations, the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia (ICTY) has a history and ...
This chapter draws on the rich and varied jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for t...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence...
The task of this article is to examine the academic value and factual reliability of the reports Bac...
This article analyses the fact-finding practice of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (I...
The history of international legal institutions has largely ignored the early activities of the Unit...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
Introduction to this special issue dedicated to the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugos...
The history of international law has recently come to the forefront of legal debates. Defined as the...
As some of the first modern-day international (-ised) ad hoc tribunals and hybrid courts have fulfil...
When created, international criminal tribunals (ICTs) were not only expected to do justice but also ...