This article examines the relatively extensive, liberal and increasing deployment of the International Criminal Court (ICC) as the central mechanism for redressing gross human rights abuses in Africa. It shines the spotlight on how global and domestic power matrices affect the character and behaviour of international criminal justice norms and institutions, including our sense of what the model approach to international criminal justice ought to be in Africa and elsewhere. Three inter-related arguments are advanced as follows: first, the deployment of the ICC to help redress gross human rights abuses on the African continent has its pros and cons, but its deployment to play a central role as it currently does is fraught with suspicion as re...
There is a diplomatic impasse between the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the African Union (...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) came into being as a result of a desire by the international ...
This article discusses an important paradox in international criminal law enforcement. On the one ha...
This article examines the relatively extensive, liberal and increasing deployment of the Internation...
This article examines the relatively extensive, liberal and increasing deployment of the Internation...
The purposes of this paper are, first, to demonstrate the inconsistencies of the international crimi...
For many African states, the latest iteration of Western colonialism is the International Criminal C...
The system established by the statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) is founded on the pr...
ArticleThe International Criminal Court has generally a bad reputation in the African continent as ...
The year 2013 marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Organisation of African Unity that was replaced...
International justice is not merely a function of legislation and adjudication. It depends on the ex...
1. Introduction International Criminal Court (ICC or the Court) interventions in Africa have over t...
In December 2015, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda delivered its final verdict in Buta...
Annexe 13 of final technical reportThe decision to uphold the amnesty conferred upon Thomas Kwoyelo ...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Since its formation in 2002, ...
There is a diplomatic impasse between the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the African Union (...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) came into being as a result of a desire by the international ...
This article discusses an important paradox in international criminal law enforcement. On the one ha...
This article examines the relatively extensive, liberal and increasing deployment of the Internation...
This article examines the relatively extensive, liberal and increasing deployment of the Internation...
The purposes of this paper are, first, to demonstrate the inconsistencies of the international crimi...
For many African states, the latest iteration of Western colonialism is the International Criminal C...
The system established by the statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) is founded on the pr...
ArticleThe International Criminal Court has generally a bad reputation in the African continent as ...
The year 2013 marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Organisation of African Unity that was replaced...
International justice is not merely a function of legislation and adjudication. It depends on the ex...
1. Introduction International Criminal Court (ICC or the Court) interventions in Africa have over t...
In December 2015, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda delivered its final verdict in Buta...
Annexe 13 of final technical reportThe decision to uphold the amnesty conferred upon Thomas Kwoyelo ...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Since its formation in 2002, ...
There is a diplomatic impasse between the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the African Union (...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) came into being as a result of a desire by the international ...
This article discusses an important paradox in international criminal law enforcement. On the one ha...