In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it means for the accused to be present during international criminal trials and how that meaning has changed. This book also examines the impact that absence from trial can have on the fair trial rights of the accused and whether those rights can be upheld outside of the accused’s presence. Using primary and secondary sources, Caleb Wheeler has identified four different categories of absence and how each affects the right to be present. This permits a more nuanced understanding of how the right to be present is understood in international criminal law and how it may develop in the future
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé ...
The right of a criminal defendant to be present at trial has been characterized by the Supreme Court...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
International criminal law has long recognised the right of the accused to be present at trial as pa...
International criminal law has long recognised the right of the accused to be present at trial as pa...
The right to be present is considered a fundamental part of the right to a fair trial as guaranteed ...
It is generally recognized that international criminal law provides the accused with a right to be p...
It is generally recognized that international criminal law provides the accused with a right to be p...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
Since the inception of the International Criminal Court, representatives of its various constituent ...
There is a dispute in international criminal law as to whether the right to be present at trial requ...
There is a dispute in international criminal law as to whether the right to be present at trial requ...
This work seeks to examine the potential of international criminal tribunals to set the highest stan...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé ...
The right of a criminal defendant to be present at trial has been characterized by the Supreme Court...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
International criminal law has long recognised the right of the accused to be present at trial as pa...
International criminal law has long recognised the right of the accused to be present at trial as pa...
The right to be present is considered a fundamental part of the right to a fair trial as guaranteed ...
It is generally recognized that international criminal law provides the accused with a right to be p...
It is generally recognized that international criminal law provides the accused with a right to be p...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
Since the inception of the International Criminal Court, representatives of its various constituent ...
There is a dispute in international criminal law as to whether the right to be present at trial requ...
There is a dispute in international criminal law as to whether the right to be present at trial requ...
This work seeks to examine the potential of international criminal tribunals to set the highest stan...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
A recent decision by the International Criminal Court’s Appeals Chamber in the Gbagbo and Blé Goudé ...
The right of a criminal defendant to be present at trial has been characterized by the Supreme Court...