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robinson darryl; heller kevin (curatore); mégret frédéric (curatore); nouwen sarah (curatore); ohlin jens (curatore) - the oxford handbook of international criminal law
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The Oxford Handbook of International Criminal Law

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Genere:Libro
Lingua: Inglese
Pubblicazione: 02/2020





Note Editore

In the past twenty years, international criminal law has become one of the main areas of international legal scholarship and practice. Most textbooks in the field describe the evolution of international criminal tribunals, the elements of the core international crimes, the applicable modes of liability and defences, and the role of states in prosecuting international crimes. The Oxford Handbook of International Criminal Law, however, takes a theoretically informed and refreshingly critical look at the most controversial issues in international criminal law, challenging prevailing practices, orthodoxies, and received wisdoms. Some of the contributions to the Handbook come from scholars within the field, but many come from outside of international criminal law, or indeed from outside law itself. The chapters are grounded in history, geography, philosophy, and international relations. The result is a Handbook that expands the discipline and should fundamentally alter how international criminal law is understood.




Sommario

0 - Introduction
1 - An Empirical Analysis of International Criminal Law: The Perception and Experience of the Accused
2 - Defense Perspectives on Fairness and Efficiency at the International Criminal Court
3 - Neither Here nor There: The Position of the Defence in International Criminal Tribunals
4 - The Creation of an Ad Hoc Elite: And the Value of International Criminal Law Expertise on a Global Market
5 - Teachings of Publicists and the Reinvention of the Sources Doctrine in International Criminal Law
6 - Legitimacy in War and Punishment: The Security Council and the ICC
7 - Africa and International Criminal Law
8 - On Regional Criminal Courts as Representatives of Political Communities: The Special Case of the African Criminal Court
9 - Taking Internationalism Seriously: Why International Criminal Law Matters
10 - Impunities
11 - Courting Failure: When Are International Criminal Courts Likely to be Believed by Local Audiences?
12 - 'What is An International Crime?'
13 - A Theory of International Crimes: Conceptual and Normative Issues
14 - From Aggression to Atrocity: Rethinking the History of International Criminal Law
15 - Enslavement as a Crime against Humanity: Some Doctrinal, Historical, and Theoretical Considerations
16 - A Criminological Approach to the ICC's Control Theory
17 - The Two Cultures of International Criminal Law
18 - Immunity and Impunity
19 - Epistemological Controversies and Evaluation of Evidence in International Criminal Trials
20 - The Right to Truth in International Criminal Law
21 - From Machinery to Motivation: The Lost Legacy of Criminal Organizations Liability
22 - Historical Reasoning and Judicial Historiography in International Criminal Trials
23 - Criminal/Enemy
24 - The Enemy of All Humanity
25 - Moving Images: Modes of Representation and Images of Victimhood in Audio-Visual Productions
26 - International Criminal Tribunal Backlash
27 - The Crises and Critiques of International Criminal Justice
28 - Hangman's Perspective: Three Genres of Critique following Eichmann
29 - Inequality of Arms Reversed? Defendants in the Battle for Political Legitimacy
30 - International Criminal Law and the Subordination of Emancipation: The Question of Legal Hierarchy in Transitional Justice
31 - International Criminal Justice and Humanitarianism
32 - International Criminal Law and Culture
33 - The Core Crimes of International Criminal Law
34 - Transnational Crimes
35 - The Unity of International Criminal Law: A Socio-Legal View
36 - International Criminal Law: The Next Hundred Years




Autore

Kevin Jon Heller is Associate Professor of Public International Law at the University of Amsterdam and Professor of Law at the Australian National University. He holds a PhD in law from Leiden University and a JD with distinction from Stanford Law School. His research interests focus on international criminal law, international humanitarian law, and the use of force, with a particular emphasis on the methodologies employed by those fields. His books include The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law (OUP, 2011); The Hidden Histories of War Crimes Trials (OUP, 2013) (edited with Gerry Simpson); and The Handbook of Comparative Criminal Law (Stanford University Press, 2011) (edited with Markus Dubber). Frédéric Mégret is a Full Professor and William Dawson Scholar at the Faculty of Law, McGill University. He holds an LLB from King's College London, a DEA from the Université de Paris I (Panthéon Sorbonne), and a PhD from the Graduate Institute of International Studies (Geneva), as well as a diploma from Sciences Po Paris. His research focuses on international criminal justice, the laws of war, international human rights law, transitional justice, and general international law. Sarah MH Nouwen is Reader in International Law at the University of Cambridge, Co-Deputy Director and Fellow of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, and a Fellow of Pembroke College. As of September 2020, she will be a Professor of International Law at the European University Institute in Florence. Sarah is also an Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of International Law. She is the author of Complementarity in the Line of Fire: The Catalysing Effect of the International Criminal Court in Uganda and Sudan (CUP, 2013), an empirical study into the effects of the complementarity principle in the Rome Statute on the legal systems in Uganda and Sudan. She has advised the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Department for International Development and several NGOs. In 2010-2011 she was seconded as Senior Legal Advisor to the African Union High-Level Implementation Panel on Sudan. Jens David Ohlin is Vice Dean and Professor of Law at Cornell Law School. Professor Ohlin's work stands at the intersection of four related fields: criminal law, criminal procedure, public international law, and the laws of war. Trained as both a lawyer and a philosopher, his research has tackled questions as diverse as criminal conspiracy and the punishment of collective criminal action, the philosophical foundations of international law, and the role of new technologies in warfare, including cyberwar, remotely piloted drones, and autonomous weapons. He is the author of the forthcoming monograph, Election Interference: International Law and the Future of Democracy (CUP, 2020). Darryl Robinson is Associate Professor at Queen's University Faculty of Law (Canada). He was a Hauser Scholar at New York University School of Law (LL.M International Legal Studies), a Gold Medalist at the UWO Faculty of Law, and a clerk at the Supreme Court of Canada. He served as a Legal Officer at Foreign Affairs Canada from 1997-2004. His work in the creation of the International Criminal Court and in the development of Canada's new war crimes legislation earned him a Minister's Citation and a Minister's Award for Foreign Policy Excellence. He is a co-author of Robert Cryer et al, Introduction to International Criminal Law and Procedure (CUP, 2019, 4th edition), and was the 2013-14 recipient of the Antonio Cassese Prize for International Criminal Legal Studies.










Altre Informazioni

ISBN:

9780198825203

Condizione: Nuovo
Collana: Oxford Handbooks
Dimensioni: 252 x 58.0 x 182 mm Ø 1720 gr
Formato: Copertina rigida
Pagine Arabe: 912


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