A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé case raised the possibility of a shift away from the long-standing practice of only holding trial in the presence of the accused. The final paragraphs of the 28 May 2020 decision asserts that any future trial proceedings in the Gbagbo et al. case could be held in the absence of the defendants should Mr Gbagbo and Mr Blé Goudé be released from custody and then later fail to appear for trial. This article examines the Appeals Chamber’s decision in light of the Court’s Statute, existing jurisprudence at the icc and within the larger context of international criminal law. It concludes that the Appeals Chamber’s decision fails to properly understa...
Victims have been the centre of attention at the International Criminal Court (ICC), since the Rome ...
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) adopted an innovative participatory role ...
In November 2013, the ICC’s Assembly of States Parties adopted Rule 134quater as an amendment to the...
A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé ...
Since the inception of the International Criminal Court, representatives of its various constituent ...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
The right to be present is considered a fundamental part of the right to a fair trial as guaranteed ...
Trials in absentia have always been quite a contentious source of controversies in international cri...
Since Nuremburg, no individual has been prosecuted in an international or internationalized court en...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
The story of international criminal justice does not end when the verdict is read; for both the affe...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
Victims have been the centre of attention at the International Criminal Court (ICC), since the Rome ...
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) adopted an innovative participatory role ...
In November 2013, the ICC’s Assembly of States Parties adopted Rule 134quater as an amendment to the...
A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé ...
Since the inception of the International Criminal Court, representatives of its various constituent ...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
The right to be present is considered a fundamental part of the right to a fair trial as guaranteed ...
Trials in absentia have always been quite a contentious source of controversies in international cri...
Since Nuremburg, no individual has been prosecuted in an international or internationalized court en...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
The story of international criminal justice does not end when the verdict is read; for both the affe...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
Victims have been the centre of attention at the International Criminal Court (ICC), since the Rome ...
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) adopted an innovative participatory role ...
In November 2013, the ICC’s Assembly of States Parties adopted Rule 134quater as an amendment to the...