Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes / / Ciara Laverty.

This book explores the normative dimensions of the acts that constitute international crimes. The book conceptualises the normative dimensions of these acts as processes of construction and meaning making. Developing a novel methodological approach, it identifies the narratives and discourses that e...

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Superior document:Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill | Nijhoff,, 2024.
©2024
Year of Publication:2024
Edition:1st ed.
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Series:Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024.
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ; 12.
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Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes / Ciara Laverty.
A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes
1st ed.
Leiden ; Boston : Brill | Nijhoff, 2024.
©2024
1 online resource (412 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ; 12
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Description based on print version record.
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1   Theoretical Framework --  1 International Criminalisation as Constitutive Process --  1.1  Durkheim and the Productive Politics of Criminal Law --  1.2  Crimes as Public Wrongs: Thinking Backwards --  1.3  Domestic Theories of Criminalisation: Form without International Content --  2 International Criminal Law as Discursive Project --  2.1  Expressive Theories of International Criminal Law --  2.2  Law as Discourse and Narrative --  3 Methodological Approach --  3.1  Selection of Crimes --  3.2  Methodology --  3.2.1 Historical-Normative Roots --  3.2.2 Legal Definitions --  3.2.3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.2.4 Narratives During Proceedings -- 2   Attacks on Cultural Property --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Attacks on Cultural Property in International Criminal Law --  2.1  icty  Statute --  2.2  Rome Statute --  2.3  eccc  --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Cultural Property as a Normatively Distinct Category --  3.2  Cultural Internationalism --  3.3  Object-Centrism --  3.4  Functionalism --  3.4.1 Functions --  3.4.2 Social Meaning --  3.4.3 Emotions --  4 Narratives of Cultural Value During Trial Proceedings --  4.1  International Public Opinion --  4.2  Remodelling the Landscape --  4.3  Individuals and Cultural Property --  4.4  Social and Religious Practices --  4.5  ‘Like Beings without Soul, History or Memory' --  4.6  Living Buildings --  5 Conclusion -- 3   Pillage --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Pillage in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Legal Elements --  2.2  Gravity --  2.3  Pillage as Persecution --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Scale --  3.2  Use Value --  3.3  Ownership --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Subsistence and Survival --  4.2  Culture and Emotion --  5 Conclusion -- 4   Sexual Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Rape and Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Consent vs. Coercive Circumstances --  2.2  Violence and Aggression --  2.3  Human Dignity --  2.4  Sexual Autonomy --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Normative Statements --  3.1.1 Physical and Moral Integrity --  3.1.2 Sexual Autonomy and Integrity --  3.2  Normative Themes --  3.2.1 Rape as a Weapon of War --  3.2.2 Harm to the Conjugal Order --  3.2.3 Shame and Stigma --  3.2.4 Virginity --  3.2.5 ‘The Sexual' is Private --  4 Narratives During Roceedings --  4.1  The Suffering Body --  4.2  ‘I Felt Dignified and Proud' --  4.3  Sexual Subjectivity --  5 Conclusion -- 5   Reproductive Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Reproductive Violence in the Rome Statute --  2.1  Forced Pregnancy --  2.2  Enforced Sterilization --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  No Rights, No Crime --  3.2  Intent: Beyond Ethnic Groups --  3.3  Reproductive Autonomy and Rights --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Did you have a Choice? --  4.2  Harms --  5 Conclusion -- 6   Conclusion --  1 Making Crimes Mean --  1.1  Meaning Making as Continuum --  1.2  Diversity of Interests --  1.3  Foundation Building --  2 International Criminal Wrong as Flexible and Dynamic --  2.1  Legal and Normative Pluralism --  2.2  Criminal Wrong as Socially and Politically Situated --  2.3  Legitimation --   Appendix 1 Decisions --   Appendix 2 Key Words --   Appendix 3 Transcripts -- Bibliography -- Index.
This book explores the normative dimensions of the acts that constitute international crimes. The book conceptualises the normative dimensions of these acts as processes of construction and meaning making. Developing a novel methodological approach, it identifies the narratives and discourses that emerge in practice as central for understanding the normative meanings of these acts. Using the crimes of attacks on cultural property, pillage, sexual violence and reproductive violence as case studies, the book offers a historical, conceptual, and discursive analysis of these crimes to develop a dynamic, pluralist and socially constructed account of wrong in international criminal law.
English
Includes bibliographical references and index.
International crimes Law and legislation. 
International criminal law. 
90-04-68783-1
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024.
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ; 12.
language English
format eBook
author Laverty, Ciara,
spellingShingle Laverty, Ciara,
Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes /
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ;
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1   Theoretical Framework --  1 International Criminalisation as Constitutive Process --  1.1  Durkheim and the Productive Politics of Criminal Law --  1.2  Crimes as Public Wrongs: Thinking Backwards --  1.3  Domestic Theories of Criminalisation: Form without International Content --  2 International Criminal Law as Discursive Project --  2.1  Expressive Theories of International Criminal Law --  2.2  Law as Discourse and Narrative --  3 Methodological Approach --  3.1  Selection of Crimes --  3.2  Methodology --  3.2.1 Historical-Normative Roots --  3.2.2 Legal Definitions --  3.2.3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.2.4 Narratives During Proceedings -- 2   Attacks on Cultural Property --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Attacks on Cultural Property in International Criminal Law --  2.1  icty  Statute --  2.2  Rome Statute --  2.3  eccc  --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Cultural Property as a Normatively Distinct Category --  3.2  Cultural Internationalism --  3.3  Object-Centrism --  3.4  Functionalism --  3.4.1 Functions --  3.4.2 Social Meaning --  3.4.3 Emotions --  4 Narratives of Cultural Value During Trial Proceedings --  4.1  International Public Opinion --  4.2  Remodelling the Landscape --  4.3  Individuals and Cultural Property --  4.4  Social and Religious Practices --  4.5  ‘Like Beings without Soul, History or Memory' --  4.6  Living Buildings --  5 Conclusion -- 3   Pillage --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Pillage in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Legal Elements --  2.2  Gravity --  2.3  Pillage as Persecution --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Scale --  3.2  Use Value --  3.3  Ownership --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Subsistence and Survival --  4.2  Culture and Emotion --  5 Conclusion -- 4   Sexual Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Rape and Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Consent vs. Coercive Circumstances --  2.2  Violence and Aggression --  2.3  Human Dignity --  2.4  Sexual Autonomy --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Normative Statements --  3.1.1 Physical and Moral Integrity --  3.1.2 Sexual Autonomy and Integrity --  3.2  Normative Themes --  3.2.1 Rape as a Weapon of War --  3.2.2 Harm to the Conjugal Order --  3.2.3 Shame and Stigma --  3.2.4 Virginity --  3.2.5 ‘The Sexual' is Private --  4 Narratives During Roceedings --  4.1  The Suffering Body --  4.2  ‘I Felt Dignified and Proud' --  4.3  Sexual Subjectivity --  5 Conclusion -- 5   Reproductive Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Reproductive Violence in the Rome Statute --  2.1  Forced Pregnancy --  2.2  Enforced Sterilization --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  No Rights, No Crime --  3.2  Intent: Beyond Ethnic Groups --  3.3  Reproductive Autonomy and Rights --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Did you have a Choice? --  4.2  Harms --  5 Conclusion -- 6   Conclusion --  1 Making Crimes Mean --  1.1  Meaning Making as Continuum --  1.2  Diversity of Interests --  1.3  Foundation Building --  2 International Criminal Wrong as Flexible and Dynamic --  2.1  Legal and Normative Pluralism --  2.2  Criminal Wrong as Socially and Politically Situated --  2.3  Legitimation --   Appendix 1 Decisions --   Appendix 2 Key Words --   Appendix 3 Transcripts -- Bibliography -- Index.
author_facet Laverty, Ciara,
author_variant c l cl
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Laverty, Ciara,
title Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes /
title_sub A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes /
title_full Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes / Ciara Laverty.
title_fullStr Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes / Ciara Laverty.
title_full_unstemmed Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes / Ciara Laverty.
title_auth Meaning Making in International Criminal Law : A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes /
title_alt A Normative Account of the Acts that Constitute International Crimes
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1   Theoretical Framework --  1 International Criminalisation as Constitutive Process --  1.1  Durkheim and the Productive Politics of Criminal Law --  1.2  Crimes as Public Wrongs: Thinking Backwards --  1.3  Domestic Theories of Criminalisation: Form without International Content --  2 International Criminal Law as Discursive Project --  2.1  Expressive Theories of International Criminal Law --  2.2  Law as Discourse and Narrative --  3 Methodological Approach --  3.1  Selection of Crimes --  3.2  Methodology --  3.2.1 Historical-Normative Roots --  3.2.2 Legal Definitions --  3.2.3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.2.4 Narratives During Proceedings -- 2   Attacks on Cultural Property --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Attacks on Cultural Property in International Criminal Law --  2.1  icty  Statute --  2.2  Rome Statute --  2.3  eccc  --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Cultural Property as a Normatively Distinct Category --  3.2  Cultural Internationalism --  3.3  Object-Centrism --  3.4  Functionalism --  3.4.1 Functions --  3.4.2 Social Meaning --  3.4.3 Emotions --  4 Narratives of Cultural Value During Trial Proceedings --  4.1  International Public Opinion --  4.2  Remodelling the Landscape --  4.3  Individuals and Cultural Property --  4.4  Social and Religious Practices --  4.5  ‘Like Beings without Soul, History or Memory' --  4.6  Living Buildings --  5 Conclusion -- 3   Pillage --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Pillage in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Legal Elements --  2.2  Gravity --  2.3  Pillage as Persecution --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Scale --  3.2  Use Value --  3.3  Ownership --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Subsistence and Survival --  4.2  Culture and Emotion --  5 Conclusion -- 4   Sexual Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Rape and Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Consent vs. Coercive Circumstances --  2.2  Violence and Aggression --  2.3  Human Dignity --  2.4  Sexual Autonomy --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Normative Statements --  3.1.1 Physical and Moral Integrity --  3.1.2 Sexual Autonomy and Integrity --  3.2  Normative Themes --  3.2.1 Rape as a Weapon of War --  3.2.2 Harm to the Conjugal Order --  3.2.3 Shame and Stigma --  3.2.4 Virginity --  3.2.5 ‘The Sexual' is Private --  4 Narratives During Roceedings --  4.1  The Suffering Body --  4.2  ‘I Felt Dignified and Proud' --  4.3  Sexual Subjectivity --  5 Conclusion -- 5   Reproductive Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Reproductive Violence in the Rome Statute --  2.1  Forced Pregnancy --  2.2  Enforced Sterilization --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  No Rights, No Crime --  3.2  Intent: Beyond Ethnic Groups --  3.3  Reproductive Autonomy and Rights --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Did you have a Choice? --  4.2  Harms --  5 Conclusion -- 6   Conclusion --  1 Making Crimes Mean --  1.1  Meaning Making as Continuum --  1.2  Diversity of Interests --  1.3  Foundation Building --  2 International Criminal Wrong as Flexible and Dynamic --  2.1  Legal and Normative Pluralism --  2.2  Criminal Wrong as Socially and Politically Situated --  2.3  Legitimation --   Appendix 1 Decisions --   Appendix 2 Key Words --   Appendix 3 Transcripts -- Bibliography -- Index.
title_new Meaning Making in International Criminal Law :
title_sort meaning making in international criminal law : a normative account of the acts that constitute international crimes /
series Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ;
series2 Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024
Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ;
publisher Brill | Nijhoff,
publishDate 2024
physical 1 online resource (412 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1   Theoretical Framework --  1 International Criminalisation as Constitutive Process --  1.1  Durkheim and the Productive Politics of Criminal Law --  1.2  Crimes as Public Wrongs: Thinking Backwards --  1.3  Domestic Theories of Criminalisation: Form without International Content --  2 International Criminal Law as Discursive Project --  2.1  Expressive Theories of International Criminal Law --  2.2  Law as Discourse and Narrative --  3 Methodological Approach --  3.1  Selection of Crimes --  3.2  Methodology --  3.2.1 Historical-Normative Roots --  3.2.2 Legal Definitions --  3.2.3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.2.4 Narratives During Proceedings -- 2   Attacks on Cultural Property --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Attacks on Cultural Property in International Criminal Law --  2.1  icty  Statute --  2.2  Rome Statute --  2.3  eccc  --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Cultural Property as a Normatively Distinct Category --  3.2  Cultural Internationalism --  3.3  Object-Centrism --  3.4  Functionalism --  3.4.1 Functions --  3.4.2 Social Meaning --  3.4.3 Emotions --  4 Narratives of Cultural Value During Trial Proceedings --  4.1  International Public Opinion --  4.2  Remodelling the Landscape --  4.3  Individuals and Cultural Property --  4.4  Social and Religious Practices --  4.5  ‘Like Beings without Soul, History or Memory' --  4.6  Living Buildings --  5 Conclusion -- 3   Pillage --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Pillage in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Legal Elements --  2.2  Gravity --  2.3  Pillage as Persecution --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Scale --  3.2  Use Value --  3.3  Ownership --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Subsistence and Survival --  4.2  Culture and Emotion --  5 Conclusion -- 4   Sexual Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Rape and Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Consent vs. Coercive Circumstances --  2.2  Violence and Aggression --  2.3  Human Dignity --  2.4  Sexual Autonomy --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Normative Statements --  3.1.1 Physical and Moral Integrity --  3.1.2 Sexual Autonomy and Integrity --  3.2  Normative Themes --  3.2.1 Rape as a Weapon of War --  3.2.2 Harm to the Conjugal Order --  3.2.3 Shame and Stigma --  3.2.4 Virginity --  3.2.5 ‘The Sexual' is Private --  4 Narratives During Roceedings --  4.1  The Suffering Body --  4.2  ‘I Felt Dignified and Proud' --  4.3  Sexual Subjectivity --  5 Conclusion -- 5   Reproductive Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Reproductive Violence in the Rome Statute --  2.1  Forced Pregnancy --  2.2  Enforced Sterilization --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  No Rights, No Crime --  3.2  Intent: Beyond Ethnic Groups --  3.3  Reproductive Autonomy and Rights --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Did you have a Choice? --  4.2  Harms --  5 Conclusion -- 6   Conclusion --  1 Making Crimes Mean --  1.1  Meaning Making as Continuum --  1.2  Diversity of Interests --  1.3  Foundation Building --  2 International Criminal Wrong as Flexible and Dynamic --  2.1  Legal and Normative Pluralism --  2.2  Criminal Wrong as Socially and Politically Situated --  2.3  Legitimation --   Appendix 1 Decisions --   Appendix 2 Key Words --   Appendix 3 Transcripts -- Bibliography -- Index.
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;</subfield><subfield code="a">Boston :</subfield><subfield code="b">Brill | Nijhoff,</subfield><subfield code="c">2024.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©2024</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (412 pages)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ;</subfield><subfield code="v">12</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="t">Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1   Theoretical Framework --  1 International Criminalisation as Constitutive Process --  1.1  Durkheim and the Productive Politics of Criminal Law --  1.2  Crimes as Public Wrongs: Thinking Backwards --  1.3  Domestic Theories of Criminalisation: Form without International Content --  2 International Criminal Law as Discursive Project --  2.1  Expressive Theories of International Criminal Law --  2.2  Law as Discourse and Narrative --  3 Methodological Approach --  3.1  Selection of Crimes --  3.2  Methodology --  3.2.1 Historical-Normative Roots --  3.2.2 Legal Definitions --  3.2.3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.2.4 Narratives During Proceedings -- 2   Attacks on Cultural Property --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Attacks on Cultural Property in International Criminal Law --  2.1  icty  Statute --  2.2  Rome Statute --  2.3  eccc  --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Cultural Property as a Normatively Distinct Category --  3.2  Cultural Internationalism --  3.3  Object-Centrism --  3.4  Functionalism --  3.4.1 Functions --  3.4.2 Social Meaning --  3.4.3 Emotions --  4 Narratives of Cultural Value During Trial Proceedings --  4.1  International Public Opinion --  4.2  Remodelling the Landscape --  4.3  Individuals and Cultural Property --  4.4  Social and Religious Practices --  4.5  ‘Like Beings without Soul, History or Memory' --  4.6  Living Buildings --  5 Conclusion -- 3   Pillage --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Pillage in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Legal Elements --  2.2  Gravity --  2.3  Pillage as Persecution --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Scale --  3.2  Use Value --  3.3  Ownership --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Subsistence and Survival --  4.2  Culture and Emotion --  5 Conclusion -- 4   Sexual Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Rape and Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law --  2.1  Consent vs. Coercive Circumstances --  2.2  Violence and Aggression --  2.3  Human Dignity --  2.4  Sexual Autonomy --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  Normative Statements --  3.1.1 Physical and Moral Integrity --  3.1.2 Sexual Autonomy and Integrity --  3.2  Normative Themes --  3.2.1 Rape as a Weapon of War --  3.2.2 Harm to the Conjugal Order --  3.2.3 Shame and Stigma --  3.2.4 Virginity --  3.2.5 ‘The Sexual' is Private --  4 Narratives During Roceedings --  4.1  The Suffering Body --  4.2  ‘I Felt Dignified and Proud' --  4.3  Sexual Subjectivity --  5 Conclusion -- 5   Reproductive Violence --  1 Historical-Normative Roots in International Law --  2 Definitions of Reproductive Violence in the Rome Statute --  2.1  Forced Pregnancy --  2.2  Enforced Sterilization --  3 Normative Themes in the Case Law --  3.1  No Rights, No Crime --  3.2  Intent: Beyond Ethnic Groups --  3.3  Reproductive Autonomy and Rights --  4 Narratives During Proceedings --  4.1  Did you have a Choice? --  4.2  Harms --  5 Conclusion -- 6   Conclusion --  1 Making Crimes Mean --  1.1  Meaning Making as Continuum --  1.2  Diversity of Interests --  1.3  Foundation Building --  2 International Criminal Wrong as Flexible and Dynamic --  2.1  Legal and Normative Pluralism --  2.2  Criminal Wrong as Socially and Politically Situated --  2.3  Legitimation --   Appendix 1 Decisions --   Appendix 2 Key Words --   Appendix 3 Transcripts -- Bibliography -- Index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">This book explores the normative dimensions of the acts that constitute international crimes. The book conceptualises the normative dimensions of these acts as processes of construction and meaning making. Developing a novel methodological approach, it identifies the narratives and discourses that emerge in practice as central for understanding the normative meanings of these acts. Using the crimes of attacks on cultural property, pillage, sexual violence and reproductive violence as case studies, the book offers a historical, conceptual, and discursive analysis of these crimes to develop a dynamic, pluralist and socially constructed account of wrong in international criminal law.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="546" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">English</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="650" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">International crimes</subfield><subfield code="x">Law and legislation. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="650" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">International criminal law. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="z">90-04-68783-1</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Human Rights and Humanitarian Law E-Books Online, Collection 2024.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Leiden Studies on the Frontiers of International Law ;</subfield><subfield code="v">12.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="906" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">BOOK</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="ADM" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">2024-07-03 00:36:17 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="f">system</subfield><subfield code="c">marc21</subfield><subfield code="a">2024-05-14 11:01:09 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="g">false</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="AVE" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="i">Brill</subfield><subfield code="P">EBA Brill All</subfield><subfield code="x">https://eu02.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/uresolver/43ACC_OEAW/openurl?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&amp;portfolio_pid=5355557450004498&amp;Force_direct=true</subfield><subfield code="Z">5355557450004498</subfield><subfield code="b">Available</subfield><subfield code="8">5355557450004498</subfield></datafield></record></collection>