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Antonio Cassese was awarded the Wolfgang Friedmann memorial Award 2007 for outstanding contributions to the field of international law
The Oxford Companion to International Criminal Justice
Antonio Cassese, Guido Acquaviva, Dapo Akande, Laurel Baig, Jia Bing Bing, Robert Cryer, Urmila Dé, Paola Gaeta, Julia Geneuss, Katrina Gustafson, and others
1,096 pages
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246x171mm
978-0-19-923831-6
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Hardback
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22 January 2009
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This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- The only reference work that offers comprehensive coverage of all aspects of international criminal justice
- The beginning of the first trials at the International Criminal Court give this book real practical significance
- Combines long and short articles allowing users to pursue a topic from the introductory level through to a more in-depth level
- Contributions from 120 leading academics, practitioners and judges offer a wide variety of perspectives
The move to end impunity for human rights atrocities has seen the creation of international and hybrid tribunals and increased prosecutions in domestic courts. The Oxford Companion to International Criminal Justice is the first major reference work to provide a complete overview of this emerging field. Its nearly 1100 pages are divided into three sections. In the first part, 21 essays by leading thinkers offer a comprehensive survey of issues and debates surrounding international humanitarian law, international criminal law, and their enforcement. The second part is arranged alphabetically,
containing 320 entries on doctrines, procedures, institutions and personalities. The final part contains over 400 case summaries on different trials from international and domestic courts dealing with war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, torture, and terrorism. With analysis and commentary on every aspect of international criminal justice, this Companion is designed to be the first port of call for scholars and practitioners interested in current developments in international justice.Readership: Academics, scholars, advanced students and practitioners of public international law and international criminal law.
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Antonio Cassese, Professor of International Law, University of Florence; former Judge and President, ICTY, Guido Acquaviva, Legal Officer, ICTY, Dapo Akande, University Lecturer in Public International Law and Yamani Fellow, St. Peter's College, Oxford, Laurel Baig, Legal Officer, ICTY, Jia Bing Bing, Professor of International Law, Tsinghua University, Beijing, Robert Cryer, Professor of International and Criminal Law, Birmingham Law School, Urmila Dé, Editorial Assistant, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Paola Gaeta, Professor of International Law and International Criminal Law, University of Florence and
University of Geneva, Julia Geneuss, Research Fellow in International Criminal Law, Humboldt-Universät Berlin, Katrina Gustafson, Legal Officer, ICTY, and others Contributors: GUIDO ACQUAVIVA, Legal Officer, ICTY DAPO AKANDE, University Lecturer in Public International Law and Yamani Fellow, St. Peter's College, Oxford STUART ALFORD, Barrister, 36 Bedford Row, The Chambers of Frances Oldham QC, London JOSE ALVAREZ, Hamilton Fish Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Columbia Law School CECILE APTEL, Former Chief, Legal Advisory Section, UN International
Independent Investigation Commission (Lebanon); Senior Fellow, International Centre for Transitional Justice, New York LAUREL BAIG, Appeals Counsel, ICTY NATASHA BAKHT, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law Common Law Section, Ottawa University ILIAS BANTEKAS, Professor of Law and Associate Director, Centre for International and Public Law, Brunel University M. CHERIF BASSIOUNI, Distinguished Research Professor of Law, DePaul University, Chicago; President Emeritus, International Human Rights Law Institute ORNA BEN-NAFTALI, Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence and Dean, The College of Management, Academic Studies, Rishon LeZion (Tel Aviv) MARKUS BENZING, Research Fellow, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public
Law and International Law, Frankfurt STUART BERESFORD, Senior Legal Advisor, New Zealand Ministry of Justice NEHAL BHUTA, Assistant Professor of Law, Toronto University ANDREA BIANCHI, Professor of International Law, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva and the Catholic University, Milan NEIL BOISTER, Associate Professor, School of Law, Canterbury University, Christchurch VALERIA BOLICI, Associate Legal Officer, ICTY BEATRICE I. BONAFE, Lecturer in Law, Macerata University CHRISTOPH BURCHARD, Research Fellow in Criminal Law, Tubingen University BORIS BURGHARDT, Researcher in German and International Law, Criminal Procedural Law and Contemporary Legal History, Humboldt University Berlin
WILLIAM BURKE WHITE, Assistant Professor of Law, University Of Pennsylvania Law School, Philadelphia CHRISTINE BYRON, Lecturer in Public International Law, Human Rights Law and Criminal Law, Cardiff Law School ANTONIO CASSESE, Professor of Public International Law, Florence University; former Judge and President, ICTY AMIR CENGIC, Associate Legal Officer, ICTY ADOLFO CERETTI, Professor of Criminology, Milo-Bicocca University CHRISTINE CHINKIN, Professor of International Law, London School of Economics ANNALISA CIAMPI, Associate Professor of European Law, Verona University JAMES COCKAYNE, Associate, International Peace Academy, New York LUC COTE, Former Chief of Prosecution, Special Court
for Sierra Leone; currently Consultant with UN High Commission for Human Rights in Kinshasa ROBERT CRYER, Professor of International and Criminal Law, Birmingham University MIRJAN R. DAMASKA, Sterling Professor Emeritus of Law, Yale Law School, New Haven ALLISON MARSTON DANNER, Adjunct Professor of Law, Vanderbilt University Law School; Assistant US Attourney, US Department of Justice, Northern District of California SYLVIA DE BERTODANO, Barrister, 25 Bedford Row, Chambers of Rock Tansey QC, London; Counsel before International Courts and Tribunals JEROME DE HEMPTINNE, Legal Officer, Special Tribunal for Lebanon MIREILLE DELMAS-MARTY, Professor of Comparative Legal Studies and Internationalization of Law, Collège de
France MELANIE DESHAIES, Research Assistant, Law Faculty, Montreal University ALBERTO DI MARTINO, Associate Professor in Criminal Law, Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa KNUT DORMAN, Head of Legal Division, ICRC, Geneva CHRIS ENGELS, Former Head of Defence Office, State Court of Bosnia Herzegovina, INPROL, Justice Advisor - Afganistan Justice Sector Support Programme JOANNA EVANS, Barrister, 25 Bedford Row, Chambers of Rock Tansey QC, London; Counsel before International Courts and Tribunals NORMAN FARRELL, Deputy Prosecutor, ICTY WILLIAM FENRICK, Former Senior Legal Adviser, ICTY; Lecturer in International Criminal Law and Humanitarian Law, Dalhousie Law School, Halifax GEORGE P. FLETCHER, Cardozo
Professor of Jurisprudence, Columbia Law School, New York HAKAN FRIMAN, Deputy Director, Ministry of Justice Division for Penal Law, Sweden; Honorary Professor, University College London MICAELA FRULLI, Lecturer in International Law, University of Florence PAOLA GAETA, Professor of International Law and International Criminal Law, Universities of Florence and Geneva KATHERINE GALLAGHER, Staff Attorney, Centre for Constitutional Rights, New York ALBERTO GARGANI, Professor of Criminal Law, Pisa University ANDREA GATTINI, Professor of International Law, Padua University FERGAL GAYNOR, Trial Attorney, ICTR JULIA GENEUSS, Research Fellow in International Criminal Law, Humboldt University, Berlin DERMOT GROOME, Senior Trial Attorney, ICTY KATRINA GUSTAFSON, Legal Officer, ICTY GERD HANKEL, Fellow, Hamburg Foundation for the Advancement of Research and Culture MATTHEW HAPPOLD, Reader in Law, University of Hull FREDERIK HARHOFF, Ad litem Judge, ICTY EMILY HASLAM, Lecturer in Law, Kent Law School, Canterbury JEAN-MARIE HENCKAERTS, Legal Advisor, International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva GILLIAN HIGGINS, Barrister, 25 Bedford Row, Chambers of Rock Tansey QC, London; Counsel before International Courts and Tribunals CLAUDIA HOEFFER, Legal Officer, ICTY FLORIAN JESSBERGER, Lichtenberg Professor of International and Comparative Criminal Law, Humboldt University, Berlin JIA BING BING, Professor of International Law, Tsinghua University, Beijing JOHN R.W.D. JONES, Barrister, Doughty Street Chambers, and part-time Immigrations Judge, London MARKOS KARAVIAS, D.Phil Candidate in Law, St Catharine's College, Oxford JANN KLEFFNER, Assistant Professor of International Law, Amsterdam University MARTI KOSKENNIEMI, Professor of Law, Helsinki University; Counsellor, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Helsinki HELMUT KREIKER, Research Assistant, Max Planck Institute of Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg CLAUS KRESS, Professor of Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, International Criminal Law and Public International Law, Cologne University EVE LA HAYE, Former Associate Legal
Officer, ICTY; currently Legal Advisor, Arms Unit, ICRC, Geneva FANNIE LAFONTAINE, Professor, Faculty of Law, Laval University, Quebec JULIETTE LELIEUR-FISCHER, Fellow, Max Planck Institute of Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg JUERG LINDENMANN, Deputy Legal Adviser, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, Bern SUZANNAH LINTON, Associate Professor and Director of the Human Rights Programme, Hong Kong University LIU DAQUN, Judge, ICTY ANDREW LOEWENSTEIN, Attorney, International Disputes Practice Group, Foley Hoag LLP, New York STEFANO MANACORDA, Associate Professor of Criminal Law, University of Naples 2 MATTHIAS MARCUSSEN, Trial Attorney, ICTY JENNY MARTINEZ, Human Rights
Lawyer; Associate Professor, Stanford Law School, Palo Alto GABRIELLE MCINTYRE, Chef de Bureau, Office of the President, ICTY CHANTAL MELONI, Researcher in International Law, Milan University JAYKUMAR MENON, Legal Researcher with the Centre for International Sustainable Development Law, Montreal GUENAEL METTRAUX, Counsel before International Criminal Tribunals RICHARD V. MEYER, Major with the US Army and Judge Advocate KEREN R. MICHAELI, D.Phil. Candidate in Law, St Anthony's College, Oxford MICHELA MIRAGLIA, Lecturer in Comparative and International Criminal Procedure, Genoa University FRANCESCO MONETA, Associate Legal Officer, ICTY ERIC MOSE, Judge, former President (2003-2007) and
Vice-President (1999-2003), ICTR DARYL A. MUNDIS, Senior Trial Attorney, ICTY JAN NEMITZ, Legal Officer, ICTY ERIC MOSE, Judge, former President (2003-2007) and Vice President (1999-2003), ICTR VOLKER NERLICH, Assessor, Kammergericht, Berlin; Associate Legal Officer, ICC JONAS NILSSON, Legal Officer, ICTY JENS D. OHLIN. Assistant Professor of Law, Cornell University Law School, Ithaca MARTINS PAPARINSKIS, D.Phil Candidate in Law, The Queen's College, Oxford MARK PIETH, Professor of Criminal Law and Criminology, Basle University; Chairman of the OECD Working Group on Bribery in International Business Transactions GIULIA PINZAUTI, Ph.D Candidate in Law, European University Institute,
Florence ANTOINE REINHARD, Research and Teaching Assistant in Criminal Law, Geneva University LUC REYDAMS, Assistant Professional Specialist, Department of Political Science, Notre Dame University NATALINO RONZITTI, Professor of International Law, Libera Universita degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli, Rome CHRISTOPH SAFFERLING,Professor of Criminal, Criminal Procedural Law, and International Law, International Centre for Research and Documentation of War Crimes, Philipps University, Marburg MARCO SASSOLI, Professor of International Law, Geneva University WILLIAM SCHABAS, OC, MRIA, Professor of Human Rights Law, National University Of Ireland, Galway, and Director of the Irish Centre for Human Rights, MIRI SHARON,
Associate Legal Officer, UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) DAPHNA SHRAGA, Principal Legal Officer in the Office of the Legal Counsel, United Nations RUPERT SKILBECK, Barrister; former Head, Defence Support Section, ECCC; Litigation Director at Open Society Justice Initiative, New York ROBERT D. SLOANE, Associate Professor, Boston University Law School GORAN SLUITER, Professor of International Law of Criminal Procedure, Amsterdam Universty; Judge at the District Court of Utrecht and The Hague ALISON A. SMITH, Legal Counsel and Coordinator, International Criminal Justice Program, No Peace Without Justice, Brussels GARY D. SOLIS, Former Military Prosecutor, Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown University JAMES
G. STEWART, Associate-in-law, Columbia University, New York ALFREDO STRIPPOLI, Legal Officer, Special Chamber for War Crimes, Sarajevo BERT SWART, Former ad litem Judge, ICTY; Professor of Criminal Law; Amsterdam University VANESSA THALMANN, Research and Teaching Assistant in Criminal Law, Geneva University TOBIAS THIENEL, LLM (Edinburgh); Legal Practitioner, Court of Schleswig-Holstein FIREW KEBEDE TIBA, Research Officer, Law Faculty, Hong Kong University ALAN TIEGER, Senior Trial Attorney, ICTY VLADIMIR TOCHILOVSKY, Trial Attorney, ICTY DAVID TOLBERT, Former Deputy Prosecutor, ICTY; UN Assistant Secretary-General, Expert on the United Nations Assistamce to the Khmer Rouge Trials (UNAKRT) CHRISTIAN TOMUSCHAT, Professor Emeritus of Public Law, Humboldt University, Berlin ANTONIOS TZANAKOPOULOS, D.Phil Candidate in Law, St. Anne's College, Oxford DAVID TURNS, Senior Lecturer in International Laws of Armed Conflict, Cranfield University, Shrivenham THOMAS UNGER, Program Associate, International Center for Transitional Justice, New York PHILIPPE VALLIERES-ROLAND, Former Legal Officer, ICTY ANTONIO VALLINI, Associate Professor in Criminal Law, Florence University HARMEN VAN DER WILT, Professor of International Criminal Law, Amsterdam University LUISA VIERUCCI, Lecturer in Law, Florence University COLIN WARBRICK, Honorary Professor, University of Birminghand, and Barrister, Doughty
Street Chambers, London GERHARD WERLE, Professor of German and International Criminal Law, Criminal Procedural Law and Contemporary Legal History, Humboldt University, Berlin MARIEKE WIERDA, Director, Prosecutions Programme, International Centre for Transitional Justice, New York SHARON A. WILLIAMS, Professor, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, Toronto SARAH J. WILLIAMS, Dorset Fellow in Public International Law, British Institute of International and Comparative Law, London YANG LIJUN, Fellow, Centre for International Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing ALEXANDER ZAHAR, Lecturer, Griffiths Law School, Queensland SALVATORE ZAPPALA, Professor of International Law, Catania University GENTIAN ZYBERI, Lecturer and Researcher, Netherlands Institute of Human Rights, Utrecht School of Law
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"A significant work which treats its subject both broadly and in depth in an accessible manner...With analysis and commentary on every aspect of international criminal justice, this Companion is designed to be an entry point for scholars, practitioners, and others interested in current developments in international justice." - David Badertscher, New York Law Librarian "The Companion offers a unique and comprehensive explanation and analysis of the most important issues in international criminal law. Although such a book has been long awaited by scholars and practitioners, it can be noted that it was worth waiting for..." - Jernej Cernic, International Law Observer.eu "The strength of this book lies in
the various professional backgrounds of its contributors, some of them being practitioners working in international tribunals...The book addresses intricate issues of international criminal justice in a manner that is also accessible to persons who are not familiar with criminal law. It is thus designed, not only to be a good doctrinal and practical support for both international scholars and criminal lawyers, but also to be used by anyone interested in current developments in international criminal law. A great read!" - Elise Hansbury, Journal de TRIAL n19, july 2009 "Twelve hundred pages long, written by 132 authors, and comprising 21 essays, 300 encyclopedia entries, and more than 330 case synopses, the book is, quite simply, the most ambitious edited work in
the history of international criminal law (ICL). Fortunately it is also the best." - Kevin Jon Heller, Melbourne Law School, The American Journal Of International Law vol 104
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Part A: Major Problems of International Criminal Justice
I. How to Face International Crimes
A. Ceretti: Collective Violence and International Crimes
A. Bianchi: State Responsibility and Criminal Liability of Individuals
J. E. Alvarez: Alternatives to International Criminal Justice
II. Fundamentals of International Criminal Law
D. Akande: Sources of International Criminal Law
G. Werle: General Principles of International Criminal Law
P. Gaeta: International Criminalization of Prohibited Conduct
C. Chinkin: Gender-related Violence and International Criminal Law and Justice
B. Swart: Modes of International Criminal Liability
III. The Interplay of International Criminal Law and Other Bodies of Law
M. Delmas-Marty: Comparative Criminal Law as a Necessary Tool for the Application of International Criminal Law
G.P. Fletcher: The Influence of the Common Law and Civil Law Traditions on International Criminal Law
M. Sassòli: Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law
IV. International Criminal Trials
A. Cassese: The Rationale for International Criminal Justice
M. Cherif Bassiouni: International Criminal Justice in Historical Perspective: The Tension Between States' Interests and the Pursuit of International Justice
C. Kress: The International Criminal Court as a Turning Point in the history of International Criminal Justice
Bing Bing Jia: The International Criminal Court and Third States
D. Shraga: Politics and Justice: The Role of the Security Council
M.R. Damaska: Problematic Features of International Criminal Procedure
G. Sluiter: Cooperation of States with International Criminal Tribunals
R. Cryer: Means of Gathering Evidence and Arresting Suspects in Situations of States' failure to Cooperate
F. Jessberger: International v. National Prosecution of International Crimes
S. Zappalà: Judicial Activism v. Judicial Restraint in International Criminal Justice
Part B: Issues, Institutions, and Personalities
Part C: Cases
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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