Readership: Scolars and practitioners working with or in the international courts and tribunals, staff of international governmental and non-governmental organizations.
Edited by Cesare P.R. Romano, Assistant Director, Project on International Courts and Tribunals, Center on International Cooperation, New York University; Associate Professor, Fordham University, André Nollkaemper, Professor of Public International Law and Director of the Amsterdam Center for International Law, Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam, and Jann K. Kleffner, PhD Research Associate and Lecturer in International Humanitarian Law, Amsterdam Center for International Law, Faculty of Law, University of Amsterdam
"...a detailed and timely critical assessment of the concept of the internationalized criminal courts and tribunals, and the potential role and limitations of such courts and tribunals in contributing to justice and reconciliation..shows the complexity and importance of the questions raised by the internationalized criminal tribunals" - Buchbesprechungen
Preface Acknowledgements Abbreviations Table of Contents INTRODUCTION 1: A. Cassese: The role of internationalized courts and tribunals in the fight against international criminality 2: D. Shraga: The Second Generation UN-Based Tribunals: A Diversity Of Mixed Jurisdictions PART I: INTERNATIONALIZED CRIMINAL COURTS AND TRIBUNALS Kosovo 3: J. Cerone and C. Baldwin: Explaining and Evaluating the UNMIK Court System 4: J-C. Cady and N. Booth: Internationalized Courts in Kosovo: An UNMIK Perspective East Timor 5: S. De Bertodano: East Timor: Trials and Tribulations 6: B.Lyons: Getting Untrapped, Struggling For Truths: The Commission For Reception, Truth And Reconciliation (CAVR) In East Timor Sierra Leone 7: A. Smith: Sierra Leone: The Intersection of Law, Policy and Practice 8: P. Mochochoko and G. Tortora: The Management Committee for the Special Court for Sierra Leone 9: W. Schabas: Internationalized Courts And Their Relationship With Alternative Accountability Mechanisms: The Case Of Sierra Leone Cambodia 10: C. Etcheson: The Politics of Genocide Justice in Cambodia 11: E. Meijer: The Extraordinary Chambers In the Courts of Cambodia PART II: CROSS-CUTTING ASPECTS Institution Building 12: C. Romano: The Judges and Prosecutors of Internationalized Criminal Courts and Tribunals 13: T. Ingadottir: The Financing of Internationalized Criminal Courts and Tribunals Law and Procedure 14: B. Swart: Internationalized Courts And Substantive Criminal Law 15: H. Friman: Procedural Law of Internationalized Criminal Courts Relationship with Third Entities: National Courts, Third States, and the ICC 16: J. Kleffner and A. Nollkaemper: The Relationship Between Internationalized Courts And National Courts 17: G. Sluiter: Legal Assistance to Internationalized Criminal Courts and Tribunals 18: M. Benzing and M. Bergsmo: Some Tentative Remarks On The Relationship Between Internationalized Criminal Jurisdictions and The International Criminal Court 19: M. Colitti: Geographical and Jurisdictional Reach of the ICC: Gaps in the International Criminal Justice System and a Role for Internationalized Bodies CONCLUSIONS AND POST-FACE 20: L. Condorelli and T.Boutruche: Internationalized Criminal Courts and Tribunals: Are They Necessary? 21: A. Pellet: Internationalized Courts: Better Than Nothing Selected Bibliography Useful Websites Analytical Index