The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for International Criminal Tribunals by applying classical sources of international criminal law and combining institutional aspects of the procedural theory, specifically the goals of the international criminal trial, with the individual frameworks of fundamental rights, namely the right to be present. Through a critical analysis of concepts presented as models for trial in absentia it introduces a new concept for trials ›in absentia‹ which considers both the defendant’s right and duty to be present. The book thereby establishes a connection between legal theory, international criminal procedural law, international human rights law and comparative l...
This book takes a procedural approach to human rights guarantees in international criminal proceedin...
This Thesis is focused on the criminal trial, which is the most important part of the criminal proce...
Can international criminal courts provide defendants with fair trials? The question can be approache...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
Trials in absentia have always been quite a contentious source of controversies in international cri...
This work seeks to examine the potential of international criminal tribunals to set the highest stan...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
How ought the International Criminal Court act with respect to specific procedural due process princ...
This treatise deconstructs the international criminal trial process, in an effort to disentangle, an...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
The article analyses legal sphere, that has a lack of proper attention of the scholars – criminal p...
Since Nuremburg, no individual has been prosecuted in an international or internationalized court en...
peer reviewedThis paper aims to analyze a recent judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Un...
Among the numerous works on international criminal procedure, there has been no study focusing on th...
This book takes a procedural approach to human rights guarantees in international criminal proceedin...
This Thesis is focused on the criminal trial, which is the most important part of the criminal proce...
Can international criminal courts provide defendants with fair trials? The question can be approache...
The thesis finds a normative approach to the question whether trial in absentia is suitable for Inte...
In the last decades, in absentia proceedings (i.e. criminal proceedings conducted in the defendant’s...
Trials in absentia have always been quite a contentious source of controversies in international cri...
This work seeks to examine the potential of international criminal tribunals to set the highest stan...
This book explores how international criminal law treats the accused's right to be present during tr...
How ought the International Criminal Court act with respect to specific procedural due process princ...
This treatise deconstructs the international criminal trial process, in an effort to disentangle, an...
In The Right to Be Present at Trial in International Criminal Law Caleb H. Wheeler analyses what it ...
The article analyses legal sphere, that has a lack of proper attention of the scholars – criminal p...
Since Nuremburg, no individual has been prosecuted in an international or internationalized court en...
peer reviewedThis paper aims to analyze a recent judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Un...
Among the numerous works on international criminal procedure, there has been no study focusing on th...
This book takes a procedural approach to human rights guarantees in international criminal proceedin...
This Thesis is focused on the criminal trial, which is the most important part of the criminal proce...
Can international criminal courts provide defendants with fair trials? The question can be approache...