This book examines the concept of individual criminal responsibility for serious violations of international law, i.e. aggression, genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. Such crimes are rarely committed by single individuals. Rather, international crimes generally connote a plurality of offenders, particularly in the execution of the crimes, which are often orchestrated and masterminded by individuals behind the scene of the crimes who can be termed 'intellectual perpetrators'. For a determination of individual guilt and responsibility, a fair assessment of the mutual relationships between those persons is indispensable. By setting out how to understand and apply concepts such as joint criminal enterprise, superior responsibility...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
International criminal law lacks a coherent theory of perpetration for international crimes. Courts ...
International criminal law, created within the framework and under international humanitarian law (i...
This book focuses on the concept of state responsibility for international crimes. Part I consists o...
The recognition of individual criminal responsibility under international law is relatively recent. ...
This book offers a unique comparison between state and individual responsibility for international c...
"In the past couple of decades an autonomous international system of law has aggressively developed ...
This book offers a unique comparison between state and individual responsibility for international c...
Contemporary international criminal law is largely concerned with holding individual defendants resp...
While it is settled principle that states incur international responsibility when they commit intern...
International humanitarian law places a duty on leaders to ensure that their subordinates respect th...
This chapter is concerned with the shift in international political and legal discourse away from as...
War crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the crime of aggression (hereinafter, ‘core crimes...
The modes of liability that regulate participation in the context of international crimes tend to be...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
International criminal law lacks a coherent theory of perpetration for international crimes. Courts ...
International criminal law, created within the framework and under international humanitarian law (i...
This book focuses on the concept of state responsibility for international crimes. Part I consists o...
The recognition of individual criminal responsibility under international law is relatively recent. ...
This book offers a unique comparison between state and individual responsibility for international c...
"In the past couple of decades an autonomous international system of law has aggressively developed ...
This book offers a unique comparison between state and individual responsibility for international c...
Contemporary international criminal law is largely concerned with holding individual defendants resp...
While it is settled principle that states incur international responsibility when they commit intern...
International humanitarian law places a duty on leaders to ensure that their subordinates respect th...
This chapter is concerned with the shift in international political and legal discourse away from as...
War crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and the crime of aggression (hereinafter, ‘core crimes...
The modes of liability that regulate participation in the context of international crimes tend to be...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
This thesis examines the attribution of criminal responsibility for the crime of aggression in inter...
International criminal law lacks a coherent theory of perpetration for international crimes. Courts ...