The dilemma underlying the debate about the International Criminal Court\u27s jurisdiction over non-party nationals stems primarily from the conflicting needs for the ICC to have sufficient jurisdictional powers to bring to justice perpetrators of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity, and simultaneously, for states to retain appropriate discretion regarding methods of dispute settlement when the lawfulness of their official acts is in dispute
Although the United States supports the creation of a permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
The International Criminal Court was set up in order to dissuade state officials from participating ...
The dilemma underlying the debate about the International Criminal Court\u27s jurisdiction over non-...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
A new International Criminal Court (ICC) was created on July 17, 1998 under the Rome Statute adopted...
© 2017 Dr. Monique CormierThe Rome Statute for the International Criminal Court (‘ICC’) provides tha...
United States courts have only incomplete and uneven jurisdiction, most acquired piecemeal and only ...
The United States was one of only seven nations to vote against the treaty. The ensuing debate withi...
ICC has international legal personality, also it will exercise its legal capacity as much as is nece...
This article questions the validity under international law of the provisions of the Treaty for an ...
It cannot be overemphasized how historic the negotiations to establish a permanent International Cri...
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) permits the ICC to exercise subject-matte...
The purpose of this article is to discuss and compare the multilateral and bilateral efforts to prev...
The present study is dedicated to a discussion on the efficiency of exercise of ICC jurisdiction, ba...
Although the United States supports the creation of a permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
The International Criminal Court was set up in order to dissuade state officials from participating ...
The dilemma underlying the debate about the International Criminal Court\u27s jurisdiction over non-...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
A new International Criminal Court (ICC) was created on July 17, 1998 under the Rome Statute adopted...
© 2017 Dr. Monique CormierThe Rome Statute for the International Criminal Court (‘ICC’) provides tha...
United States courts have only incomplete and uneven jurisdiction, most acquired piecemeal and only ...
The United States was one of only seven nations to vote against the treaty. The ensuing debate withi...
ICC has international legal personality, also it will exercise its legal capacity as much as is nece...
This article questions the validity under international law of the provisions of the Treaty for an ...
It cannot be overemphasized how historic the negotiations to establish a permanent International Cri...
The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) permits the ICC to exercise subject-matte...
The purpose of this article is to discuss and compare the multilateral and bilateral efforts to prev...
The present study is dedicated to a discussion on the efficiency of exercise of ICC jurisdiction, ba...
Although the United States supports the creation of a permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
The International Criminal Court was set up in order to dissuade state officials from participating ...