This chapter examines recent instances of the prosecution of the crime of ‘spreading terror’ or ‘acts of terrorism’ by international criminal courts and relates its introduction to changing legal and political understandings of the nature of war. It discusses emerging jurisprudence on ‘terror’ as a crime before zooming in on two high-profile trials, that of Radovan Karadzic before the Yugoslavia Tribunal and that of Charles Taylor before the Special Court for Sierra Leone. By means of discourse analysis and interview materials, the chapter demonstrates how the prosecution promotes and the defence contests; how the judges grapple with; and how war-affected elite observers in Liberia have understood the introduction of ‘terror’ and ‘terrorism...
This article investigates the potential impact of an international criminal trial on a post-conflict...
Terrorism trials are an exceptional opportunity for better understanding and, hence, countering terr...
This book examines the ‘war on terror’ and radicalisation from an ontological, non-state centric per...
From events at Nuremberg and Tokyo after World War II, to the recent trials of Slobodan Milošević an...
In debates on the preemptive measures of the war on terror, criminal law is often regarded as the an...
This article examines the discourses of the prosecution and the defence in the case of Charles Taylo...
The study examines the reasons which prevent agreement being reached on a definition of acts of inte...
This article examines the discourses of the prosecution and the defence in the case of Charles Taylo...
The study examines the reasons which prevent agreement being reached on a definition of acts of inte...
The objective of this thesis is to investigate the status of the crime of ‘terror’ as a war crime un...
The Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has recently announced that she will start invest...
Since 11 september 2001, countering terrorism has become one of the biggest priorities of the intern...
Following the armed conflict in the former Yugoslavia, a new criminology of war developed, producing...
The author discusses the nature and meaning of terrorism trials during the United States’ war on ter...
This article examines the discourses of prosecution and defence in the case of Radovan Karadžić befo...
This article investigates the potential impact of an international criminal trial on a post-conflict...
Terrorism trials are an exceptional opportunity for better understanding and, hence, countering terr...
This book examines the ‘war on terror’ and radicalisation from an ontological, non-state centric per...
From events at Nuremberg and Tokyo after World War II, to the recent trials of Slobodan Milošević an...
In debates on the preemptive measures of the war on terror, criminal law is often regarded as the an...
This article examines the discourses of the prosecution and the defence in the case of Charles Taylo...
The study examines the reasons which prevent agreement being reached on a definition of acts of inte...
This article examines the discourses of the prosecution and the defence in the case of Charles Taylo...
The study examines the reasons which prevent agreement being reached on a definition of acts of inte...
The objective of this thesis is to investigate the status of the crime of ‘terror’ as a war crime un...
The Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has recently announced that she will start invest...
Since 11 september 2001, countering terrorism has become one of the biggest priorities of the intern...
Following the armed conflict in the former Yugoslavia, a new criminology of war developed, producing...
The author discusses the nature and meaning of terrorism trials during the United States’ war on ter...
This article examines the discourses of prosecution and defence in the case of Radovan Karadžić befo...
This article investigates the potential impact of an international criminal trial on a post-conflict...
Terrorism trials are an exceptional opportunity for better understanding and, hence, countering terr...
This book examines the ‘war on terror’ and radicalisation from an ontological, non-state centric per...