Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Stahn: The Law and Practice of the International Criminal Court

Carsten Stahn (Leiden Univ. - Law) has published The Law and Practice of the International Criminal Court (Oxford Univ. Press 2015). Contents include:
  • Carsten Stahn, Introduction More than a Court, Less than a Court, Several Courts in One? - The International Criminal Court in Perspective
  • Richard Dicker, The International Criminal Court (ICC) and Double Standards of International Justice
  • Leslie Vinjamuri, The ICC and the Politics of Peace and Justice
  • Deborah Ruiz Verduzco, The Relationship between the ICC and the United Nations Security Council
  • Anton Du Plessis & Ottilia Anna Maunganidze, The ICC and the AU
  • Stuart Ford, How Much Money Does the ICC Need?
  • Jonathan O'Donohue, The ICC and the ASP
  • Rod Rastan, Jurisdiction
  • Mohamed M El Zeidy, Ad hoc Declarations of Acceptance of Jurisdiction: The Palestinian Situation under Scrutiny
  • Harmen van der Wilt, Self-Referrals as an Indication of the Inability of States to Cope with Non-State Actors
  • Carsten Stahn, Admissibility Challenges Before the ICC: From Quasi-Primacy to Qualified Deference?
  • Robert Cryer, The ICC and its Relationship to Non-States Parties
  • Dov Jacobs, The Frog that Wanted to Be an Ox: The ICCs Approach to Immunities
  • Paul Seils, Putting Complementarity in its Place
  • Susana SáCouto & Katherine Cleary Thompson, Investigative Management, Strategies, and Techniques of the ICCs OTP
  • Fabricio Guariglia & Emeric Rogier, The Selection of Situations and Cases by the OTP of the ICC
  • William Schabas, Selecting Situations and Cases
  • Jenia Iontcheva Turner, Accountability of International Prosecutors
  • Gilbert Bitti, Article 21 and the Hierarchy of Sources of Law before the ICC
  • Joseph Powderly, The Rome Statute and the Attempted Corseting of the Interpretative Judicial Function: Reflections on Sources of Law and Interpretative Technique
  • Elies van Sliedregt, Perpetration and Participation in Article 25(3)
  • Jens David Ohlin, Co-Perpetration: German Dogmatik or German Invasion?
  • Thomas Weigend, Indirect Perpetration
  • Hector Olasolo, Forms of Accessorial Liability under Article 25(3)(b) and (c)
  • Kai Ambos, The ICC and Common Purpose - What Contribution is Required under Article 25(3)(d)?
  • Alejandro Kiss, Command Responsibility under Article 28 of the Rome Statute
  • Mohamed Elewa Badar & Sara Porro, Rethinking the Mental Elements in the Jurisprudence of the ICC
  • Claus Kreß, The ICCs First Encounter with the Crime of Genocide: The Case against Al Bashir
  • Darryl Robinson, Crimes against Humanity: A Better Policy on Policy
  • Michael A. Newton, Charging War Crimes: Policy and Prognosis from a Military Perspective
  • Anthony Cullen, The Characterization of Armed Conflict in the Jurisprudence of the ICC
  • Roger S. Clark, The Crime of Aggression
  • Niamh Hayes, La Lutte Continue: Investigating and Prosecuting Sexual Violence at the ICC
  • Carl-Friedrich Stuckenberg, Cumulative Charges and Cumulative Convictions
  • Simon De Smet, The International Criminal Standard of Proof at the ICC - Beyond Reasonable Doubt or Beyond Reason?
  • Ignaz Stegmiller, Confirmation of Charges
  • Håkan Friman, Trial Procedures - with a Particular Focus on the Relationship between the Proceedings of the Pre-Trial and Trial Chambers
  • Margaret M. deGuzman, Proportionate Sentencing at the ICC
  • Volker Nerlich, The Role of the Appeals Chamber
  • Kevin Jon Heller, A Stick to Hit the Accused With: The Legal Recharacterization of Facts under Regulation 55
  • Alex Whiting, Disclosure Challenges at the ICC
  • Karim A A Khan & Caroline Buisman, Sitting on Evidence: Systematic Failings in the ICC Disclosure Regime - Time for Reform
  • Aiste Dumbryte, The Roads to Freedom - Interim Release in the Practice of the ICC
  • Joris van Wijk & Marjolein Cupido, Testifying behind Bars - Detained ICC Witnesses and Human Rights Protection
  • Markus Eikel, External Support and Internal Coordination - The ICC and the Protection of Witnesses
  • Sergey Vasiliev, Victim Participation Revisited - What the ICC is Learning about Itself
  • Conor McCarthy, The Rome Statutes Regime of Victim Redress: Challenges and Prospects
  • Nick Grono & Anna de Courcy Wheeler, The Deterrent Effect of the ICC on the Commission of International Crimes by Government Leaders
  • Olympia Bekou, The ICC and Capacity Building at the National Level
  • Elizabeth Evenson & Alison Smith, Completion, Legacy, and Complementarity at the ICC
  • Philipp Ambach, A Look towards the Future - The ICC and Lessons Learnt