Contemporary issues facing the International Criminal Court /
Contemporary Issues Facing the International Criminal Court is a collection of essays by prominent international criminal law commentators, responsive to questions of interest to the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. Topics include: " Jurisdiction: The 2008-2009 Gaza...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden :
Brill Nijhoff,
2016.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Jurisdiction : the 2008-2009 Gaza issue
- Obligation to arrest : the Darfur issue
- The oversight issue
- Deterrence : the prevention issue
- The reparations issue
- Proof : the mass rape issue
- Bias? : the Africa issue
- The arrest issue.
- No jurisdictional basis for an investigation pursuant to the Palestinian Declaration / George P. Fletcher
- Press releases, not arrest warrants : interpreting the ICC prosecutor' moves in relation to the Gaza Situation / Marlies Glasius
- Palestine and the International Criminal Court : asking the right question / Michael Kearney
- Palestine is a state so the consent declaration is a valid basis for investigation by the ICC / John Quigley
- The ICC should not accept the Palestinian declaration as that of a state / Yaël Ronen
- The impact of the Genocide Convention on the obligation to implement ICC arrest warrants / Dapo Akande
- Head of state immunity as a bar to arrest / Paola Gaeta
- Closing the "impunity gap" and the role of state support of the ICC / Makau W. Mutua
- State obligations in implementing arrest warrants / William Schabas
- State cooperation issues in arresting Al Bashir / Göran Sluiter
- The proposed independent oversight mechanism for the International Criminal Court / José E. Alvarez
- The independent oversight mechanism does not have authority to investigate and decide alleged misconduct by staff in the office of the prosecutor / Nicholas Cowdery
- The role of the assembly of states parties for the ICC / Max Du Plessis and Christopher Gevers
- Establishing a transparent and effective oversight machinery and the need for constructive dialogue between the assembly, court officials, and civil society / Akbar Khan
- A reasonable request : requiring prosecutor authorization prior to any investigation by the independent oversight mechanism / Harmen van der Wilt
- The ICC would increase its prevention ability if the prosecutor' discretion were more visibly limited / Kenneth Anderson
- The Court should avoid all considerations of deterrence and instead focus on creating a credible and legitimate normative environment in which serious crimes are not tolerated / Tomer Broude
- Maximizing the ICC's crime prevention impact through positive complementarity and hard-nosed diplomacy / William W. Burke-White
- The crime prevention potential of the International Criminal Court depends upon its credibility and the support it receives from governments and states parties to the Rome Treaty / Richard Goldstone
- Maximizing opportunities to deter further atrocity crimes / David Scheffer
- Victims' rights and participation in ICC proceedings and in emerging customary international law / M. Cherif Bassiouni
- The ICC should avoid paternalistic or bureaucratic approaches to determining victims' needs and wants and should award reparations to promote victims' dignity and agency / Carla Ferstman
- Reparations in the wake of atrocities : a plan for encouraging participation by governments / Saul Levmore
- Reparations before the ICC : the need for pragmatism and creativity / Frédéric Mégret
- A minimalist reparations regime for the International Criminal Court / Eric A. Posner
- Can the ICC sustain a conviction for the underlying crime of mass rape without testimony from victims? / Kelly Dawn Askin
- Cases of mass sexual violence can be proven without direct victim testimony / Anne-Marie de Brouwer
- The use of sample survey interviews as evidence of mass rape / John Hagan
- ICC prosecution of mass rape crimes will require some evidence from victims, but the hardship of testifying can be mitigated / Ruth Wedgwood
- The inevitable practice of the Office of the Prosecutor / M. Cherif Bassiouni and Douglass Hansen
- Why Africa? / Kamari Maxine Clarke
- Is the ICC targeting Africa inappropriately? : a moral, legal and sociological assessment / Margaret M. deGuzman
- International politics and policy considerations for the inappropriate targeting of Africa by the ICC OTP / Charles Achaleke Taku
- The institutional framework of the Office of the Prosecutor, legitimacy, and overcoming bias allegations / Jessica Peake
- Is the ICC' exclusively African case docket a legitimate and appropriate intervention or an unfair targeting of Africans? / Abdul Tejan-Cole
- ICC fugitives : the need for bespoke solutions / Beth Van Schaak
- Ramping up strategies for the ICC arrests : a few lessons learned / Richard Dicker
- Some reflections on securing the arrest of ICC fugitives / Cedric Ryngaert
- Pollyannas need not apply : international justice is, to a certain extent, political justice / Tom Parker
- An integrative model for the ICC's enforcement of arrest and surrender requests : toward a more political court? / Nadia Banteka.