Exploring the Boundaries of International Criminal Justice H 296 p. 11
Findlay, Mark 著
目次
Contents: Introduction: rethinking international criminal justice?; Part I Achieving Justice in Post-Conflict Societies: Mass atrocity: theories and concepts of accountability – on the schizophrenia of accountability, Caroline Fournet; Collective responsibility for global crime: limitations with the liability paradigm, Mark Findlay; Victims' expectations towards justice in post-conflict societies: a bottom-up perspective, Ernesto Kiza and Holger-C. Rohne; Making international criminal procedure work: from theory to practice, Richard Vogler; Should states bear the responsibility of imposing sanctions on its citizens who as witnesses commit crimes before the ICC?, Sylvia Ngane. Part II International Criminal Justice as Governance: Exclusion and inclusion: bio-politics and global governance through criminalisation, Edwin Bikindo; Contrasting dynamics of global administrative measures and international criminal courts: cosmopolitanism, multilateralism, state interests, Nicholas Dorn; Governing through globalised crime: thoughts on the transition from terror, Mark Findlay; Evaluating sentencing as a force for achieving justice in international criminal trials, Ralph Henham; The paradox of global terrorism and communit- based security, Clive Walker; Index.
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