Direct jurisdiction over individuals, along with responsibilities to them, are outstanding characteristics of the new International Criminal Court (ICC or Court), as they already are of the International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and for Rwanda (ICTR). This Article raises issues of legitimate power to prosecute and to define criminal law and issues of individual human rights which necessarily arise in any criminal system. This Article is predominantly an analysis of issues of criminal jurisdiction over persons as they are treated in the ICC Statute, as well as in the current ad hoc international criminal tribunals. Part II discusses the sources of international criminal tribunals’ jurisdiction to prescribe from the...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
Direct jurisdiction over individuals, along with responsibilities to them, are outstanding character...
The present study is dedicated to a discussion on the efficiency of exercise of ICC jurisdiction, ba...
This Article examines the pros and cons of ratifying the Rome Statute of the ICC. Furthermore, it ai...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
The exercise of universal jurisdiction in cases involving crimes under international law remains hig...
This essay aims to re-examine the jurisdiction of the international criminal tribunals with the refe...
© 2017 Dr. Monique CormierThe Rome Statute for the International Criminal Court (‘ICC’) provides tha...
Under the "complementarity" regime of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), th...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
Direct jurisdiction over individuals, along with responsibilities to them, are outstanding character...
The present study is dedicated to a discussion on the efficiency of exercise of ICC jurisdiction, ba...
This Article examines the pros and cons of ratifying the Rome Statute of the ICC. Furthermore, it ai...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
The principle of domestic jurisdiction in international law makes national governments responsible f...
The exercise of universal jurisdiction in cases involving crimes under international law remains hig...
This essay aims to re-examine the jurisdiction of the international criminal tribunals with the refe...
© 2017 Dr. Monique CormierThe Rome Statute for the International Criminal Court (‘ICC’) provides tha...
Under the "complementarity" regime of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC), th...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
The Rome Treaty for an International Criminal Court (ICC) provides for the establishment ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...
Defence date: 1 October 2015Examining Board: Professor Martin Scheinin (supervisor), EUI; Professor ...