The author states that any form of international justice always represents a means of limiting national sovereignty. In the case of International Criminal Law, this limiting is even more evident by compromising elements essential to the classical paradigm of International Law, as for example the punishing monopoly of States or the concept of a quasi-absolute State sovereignty. International criminal tools, crimes, sentences, jurisdictions, are all able to be, at least partially, a legal alternative to the issues of peace-keeping and national security, exclusively political and diplomatic. This alternative inevitable leads to tensions with a power structure that has not been altered since 1945. However, for this legal criminal alternative to...
This thesis explores the relationship between the International Criminal Court and the responsibilit...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
This paper is an attempt at reconstituting the emergence of the international mechanisms of criminal...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
Although criminal jurisdiction is usually exercised by governments, offenses can also be proscribed ...
This essay argues that the position of the State is pivotal for a clear understanding of crimes agai...
Crimes against humanity committed by dictators obsessed with power have been constant throughout his...
Nullum crimen sine lege and related doctrines that limit extraterritorial jurisdiction and confer im...
International criminal justice, as it has been conceived and developed in the nineteenth century, ai...
This text shows how there has been a concerted effort, since the end of World War I, to curb a state...
Despite the deeply contested nature of international criminal law (ICL), there is almost complete sc...
This dissertation responds to the dissonance between international criminal law’s utopian visions an...
It is often heard that international criminal justice is in ‘crisis’. Although the language of ‘cris...
This thesis explores the relationship between the International Criminal Court and the responsibilit...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...
This thesis examines the area of conflict between the fundamental principles of sovereign equality o...
This paper is an attempt at reconstituting the emergence of the international mechanisms of criminal...
The necessity of prosecution of major crimes committed againstindividuals or groups has become a com...
Although criminal jurisdiction is usually exercised by governments, offenses can also be proscribed ...
This essay argues that the position of the State is pivotal for a clear understanding of crimes agai...
Crimes against humanity committed by dictators obsessed with power have been constant throughout his...
Nullum crimen sine lege and related doctrines that limit extraterritorial jurisdiction and confer im...
International criminal justice, as it has been conceived and developed in the nineteenth century, ai...
This text shows how there has been a concerted effort, since the end of World War I, to curb a state...
Despite the deeply contested nature of international criminal law (ICL), there is almost complete sc...
This dissertation responds to the dissonance between international criminal law’s utopian visions an...
It is often heard that international criminal justice is in ‘crisis’. Although the language of ‘cris...
This thesis explores the relationship between the International Criminal Court and the responsibilit...
As Falk notes, the International Criminal Court represents an idealistic mentality, optimistic about...
International law scholars often assume that the best way to enforce human rights is by establishing...