The diversification and fragmentation of international criminal law / Edited by Larissa van den Herik and Carsten Stahn.
This volume is the first in a new series of Studies on the Frontiers of International Law. The term ‘frontier’ is traditionally associated with proximity to a boundary or a demarcation line. But it is also a connecting point, id est, a passage or channel between spaces that are usually considered as...
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Year of Publication: | 2012 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law
1. |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (734 p.) |
Notes: | Description based upon print version of record. |
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Table of Contents:
- Preliminary Material / Larissa van den Herik and Carsten Stahn
- Introduction / Flavia Lattanzi
- ‘Fragmentation’, Diversifi cation and ‘3D’ Legal Pluralism: International Criminal Law as the Jack-in-the-Box? / Carsten Stahn and Larissa van den Herik
- The Judicial Dialogue between the ICJ and International Criminal Courts on the Question of Immunity / Rosanne van Alebeek
- Binocular Vision: State Responsibility and Individual Criminal Responsibility for Genocide / Philippa Webb
- Finding Custom: The ICJ and the International Criminal Courts and Tribunals Compared / Yeghishe Kirakosyan
- Human Rights Cases in Sub-regional African Courts: Towards Justice for Victims or Just More Fragmentation? / Helen Duffy
- Praising the Region: What Might a Complementary Criminal Justice System Learn from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights? / Cecilia Cristina Naddeo
- The Regionalization of Criminal Law – the Example of European Criminal Law / Ricardo Pereira
- Alternative Justice Mechanisms, Compliance and Fragmentation of International Law / Susan Kemp
- Limits of Information-sharing between the International Criminal Court and Truth Commissions / Eszter Kirs
- Puzzling over Amnesties: Defragmenting the Debate for International Criminal Tribunals / Dov Jacobs
- Chinese Humanitarian Law and International Humanitarian Law / Liu Daqun
- Approximation or Harmonisation as a Result of Implementation of the Rome Statute / David Donat Cattin
- Fragmentation of the Rome Statute through an Incoherent Jurisdictional Regime for the Crime of Aggression: A Silent Operation / Deborah Ruiz Verduzco
- Domestic Prosecution of Genocide: Fragmentation or Natural Diversity? / Cristina Fernández-Pacheco Estrada
- The Rome Statute and Domestic Proceedings for Ordinary Crimes: The (In)Admissibility of Cases before the International Criminal Court / Beatrice Pisani
- Fragmentation of the Notion of Co-Perpetration in International Criminal Law? / Chantal Meloni
- The Mens Rea Enigma in the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court / Mohamed Elewa Badar
- Reception of Common Law in Substantive International Criminal Law / James L. Bischoff
- The Principle of Complicity under International Law – Its Application to States and Individuals in Cases involving Genocide, Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes / Erik Kok
- Unifi cation or Fragmentation? Structural Tendencies in International Criminal Procedure / Mark Klamberg
- Prosecutorial Discretion in International Criminal Justice: Between Fragmentation and Unification / Hitomi Takemura
- Fragmentation in International Criminal Law and the Rights of Victims / Margaret Burnham
- The Influences of French Law on Appeal Proceedings before the International Criminal Court and the Tribunals / Xavier Tracol
- Index / Larissa van den Herik and Carsten Stahn.