Corpus juris of Islamic international criminal justice /
This pioneering scholarly oeuvre evaluates the major comparative philosophy of Islamic international criminal justice. It represents an in-depth analysis of the necessities of creating an Islamic international criminal court, its possible jurisdiction, proceedings, judgments, and sanctions. It impli...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK :
Cambridge Scholars Publishing,
2017.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Preface; Introduction; Chapter One; 1. Comparative Criminal Law; 2. Division of Islam; 3. Mohammad or Kant; 4. Beccaria in Quranology; 5. Gradual Modification; 6. Socialism within Islam; 7. Pella's Principle of 'Judicial Conscience' in Islam; 8. Bertrand Russell on Islam; 9. Christianity amid Islam; 10. The Laws of the Common Father of Man; 11. Common Quality of Beliefs; 12. Sovereignty of Rights; 13. Indispensable Guarantees; Chapter Two; 1. The Code of Conduct of Islam; 2. Traditional Principles of Criminal Jurisdiction; 3. Habeas Corpus
- 4. Knowledge of Jurisdiction5. Theory of Actus Reus; 6. Beyond any Reasonable Doubt; 7. Adaptation of an Islamic Criminal Court; 8. Shariah Adquisitorial System; 9. Rendering Justice; 10. Shariah in an International Criminal Court; 11. Philosophers Condemning Wrongful Applications of Islam; 12. Violation of Individual Rights; Chapter Three; 1. The Boundaries of Sources; 1.1. The Quran; 1.1.1. Protest Against Inequalities; 1.1.2. Automatic Application; 1.2. Sunnah; 1.3. Consensus; 1.4. Juridical Analogy; 2. No Compulsion in Ideologies; 3. Peaceful Settlement of Disputes
- 4. A Comparative Examination of SourcesChapter Four; 1. Legal Philosophy; 2. The Roots of the System; 3. The Inquisitorial Codes; 4. Interpretation by Judges; 5. Civil Law; 6. Islamic Inquisitorial System; 7. Defendant in Inquisitorial and Adversarial Proceedings; 8. Powers of the Judge; 8.1. Active Judge; 8.2. The Lay Judges; 8.3. The Islamic Assessors; 8.4. Positive Role of the Judge; 8.5. The Passive Role of Attorneys; 8.6. The Length of Trial; Chapter Five; 1. Roots of Adversarial Systems; 2. Common Law; 3. Jury or No Jury; 4. Leading Principles; 5. Criminal Cases; 6. Powers of the Judge
- 7. Witnesses in Adversarial Systems7.1. Process of Hearing; 7.2. Witnesses; 8. Advantages of Common Law; Chapter Six; 1. Legal Disciplines; 2. Hudud; 3. Qisas; 4. Tazir; 5. Prescribed Crimes; 6. Diyah; 7. The Core Crimes in an Islamic International Criminal Court; 7.1. Acts Constituting War Crimes; 7.1.1. War Crimes in Courts; 7.1.2. Defensive War; 7.1.3. Assisting Victims; 7.1.4. Protection of Fundamental Rights; 7.1.5. Fulfilment of Serious Obligations; 7.1.6. Treatment of Prisoners; 7.2. Crimes Against Humanity; 7.2.1. Wisdom of Committing Wrongful Conduct
- 7.2.2. The Existence of the Principle of Intent7.2.3. A Wrongful Conduct; 7.2.4. A Criminal Plan; 7.2.5. No Policy of Widespread Attack; 7.2.6. Policy of Systematic Attack; 7.2.7. A Wilful Blindness; 7.2.8. List of Crimes Against Humanity; 7.3. Genocide; 7.3.1. Srebrenica Genocide Case; 7.3.1.1. The Bias View of the ICJ; 7.3.1.2. The Poor Nature of Ruling; 7.3.1.3. Unrealistic Conditions; 7.3.2. Genocide in an Islamic International Criminal Court; 7.3.3. Classification; 7.3.4. Criminalization in Human Rights; 7.4. Aggression; 7.4.1. No Aggression against Aggressor; 7.4.2. Absolute Necessity