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WINNER OF THE ASIL FRANCIS LIEBER PRIZE 2009
The Law of Command Responsibility
Guénaël Mettraux
332 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-955932-9
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Hardback
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19 March 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 comprehensive account of the doctrine of command responsibility which makes it of unique value to scholars
- The focus on existing law makes it equally valuable to practitioners
- The doctrine of command responsibility applies to any military or civilian commander, as well as to terrorists and to military contractors, so it could be used extensively in relation to the Iraq War and the "War on Terror"
This book offers a unique study of the law of command or superior responsibility under international law. Born in the aftermath of the Second World War, the doctrine of superior responsibility provides that a military commander, a civilian leader, or the leader of a terrorist, paramilitary, or rebel group could be held criminally responsible in relation to crimes committed by subordinates even where he has taken no direct or personal part in the commission of these crimes. The basis of this type of liability lies in a grave and culpable failure on the part of the superior to fulfil his duties to prevent or punish crimes of subordinates. The idea that a superior could be held criminally responsible in relation to crimes of
subordinates is central to the ability of international law to ensure compliance with standards of humanitarian law, and it remains a most important legal instrument in the fight against impunity. Though it first developed in the international arena, the doctrine of superior responsibility has now spread into many domestic jurisdictions, thus offering judicial and prosecutorial authorities a ready-made instrument to hold to account the leaders of men who knew of the crimes of their subordinates but failed to adequately respond to prevent or punish those crimes. This volume provides a comprehensive and insightful dissection of the doctrine of superior responsibility and the scope of its application, as well as the evidential difficulties involved in establishing the
criminal responsibility of a superior in the context of a criminal prosecution.Readership: Academic and practising lawyers interested in international criminal law, prosecution of war crimes, and domestic criminal law; historians of the Second World War, political philosophers interested in the theory of international criminal justice
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Guénaël Mettraux, Defence Counsel, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Formerly a legal assistant in the Chambers of the ICTY
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"...the author does offer very useful practical guidelines which will be most helpful for any lawyer working on such cases, as, for example, his collection of indicia when determining if the commander possessed the necessary effective control or the required state of mind." - Michael E. Kurth, Criminal Law Forum "Anyone seeking an in-depth analysis of the present, past and future states of the doctrine of command responsibility will find this work useful." - Chris Engels, International Criminal Law Review
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PART I INTRODUCTION
1: The Evolution of the Law of Command Responsibility and the Principle of Legality
2: The Resurgence of International Criminal Justice and the Rebirth of Command Responsibility
3: Command Responsibility under Customary International Law and the Statute of the International Criminal Court
PART II NATURE AND SCOPE OF APPLICATION OF THE DOCTRINE OF COMMAND RESPONSIBILITY
4: Command Responsibility as a Sui Generis form of Liability for Omission
5: Scope of Application of the Doctrine of Command Responsibility-International and Internal Conflicts as well as Peacetime?
6: Military Commanders, Civilian leaders, and Other Superiors, wthether De Jure or De Facto
PART III ELEMENTS OF COMMAND RESPONSIBILITY AND UNDERLYING OFFENCES
7: General Remarks
8: Underlying Offences
9: A Superior-Subordinate Relationship between the Accused and Those Who Committed the Underlying Offences
10: A Culpable State of Mind
11: Breach of a Duty and Consequential Failure to Prevent or to Punish Crimes of Subordinates
PART IV CONCLUSION
12: Concluding Remarks: A Workable Standard of Liability for Superiors
Annex: Relevant Provisions
Bibliography
Index
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www.nytimes.com Read an article by Guénaël Mettraux in the New York Times, 'A Nuremberg for Guantánamo'
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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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