Highlights critical debates and controversies facing international criminal courts and tribunals, such as the tensions between peace and justice, and between fair trial rights and the need to secure a conviction. Professor William Schabas begins by considering the discipline of international criminal law, outlining the differing approaches to the description of international crimes and examining the frequent claims relating to the retroactive application of these crimes. The book then discusses the relationship between genocide and crimes against humanity, studying the fascination with what Schabas calls the 'genocide mystique'. International criminal tribunals have often been stigmatized as an exercise in victor's justice. This book traces...
International criminal justice really began at Nuremberg in 1945, after an inauspicious start at Ver...
About fifty years have gone by since international humanitarian law was first applied to the prosecu...
Prosecution has been described as 'by far the most radical interpretation of acknowledgment and acco...
Highlights critical debates and controversies facing international criminal courts and tribunals, su...
Crimes against humanity first emerged in international law in 1945, when the allied powers that won...
In this revised edition, Professor Bassiouni persuasively establishes the legal validity of the Nure...
Since the end the cold war new pattern of armed conflict is that of ferocious intrastate war. In the...
International criminal tribunals have emerged as the most tangible and well-known mechanism for seek...
The Nuremberg Judgment on the leaders of Nazi Germany proclaimed ‘crimes against peace’ – the planni...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] International criminal law has developed extraordinar...
This is a collection of essays and articles on human rights law and international criminal law autho...
This thesis deals with crimes against humanity and war crimes in the practice of the International C...
This article examines the role of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in dealing with matters of ...
Post-conflict situations, regime changes, and peace processes within situations of active hostility ...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
International criminal justice really began at Nuremberg in 1945, after an inauspicious start at Ver...
About fifty years have gone by since international humanitarian law was first applied to the prosecu...
Prosecution has been described as 'by far the most radical interpretation of acknowledgment and acco...
Highlights critical debates and controversies facing international criminal courts and tribunals, su...
Crimes against humanity first emerged in international law in 1945, when the allied powers that won...
In this revised edition, Professor Bassiouni persuasively establishes the legal validity of the Nure...
Since the end the cold war new pattern of armed conflict is that of ferocious intrastate war. In the...
International criminal tribunals have emerged as the most tangible and well-known mechanism for seek...
The Nuremberg Judgment on the leaders of Nazi Germany proclaimed ‘crimes against peace’ – the planni...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] International criminal law has developed extraordinar...
This is a collection of essays and articles on human rights law and international criminal law autho...
This thesis deals with crimes against humanity and war crimes in the practice of the International C...
This article examines the role of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in dealing with matters of ...
Post-conflict situations, regime changes, and peace processes within situations of active hostility ...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
International criminal justice really began at Nuremberg in 1945, after an inauspicious start at Ver...
About fifty years have gone by since international humanitarian law was first applied to the prosecu...
Prosecution has been described as 'by far the most radical interpretation of acknowledgment and acco...