The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) was the first and most celebrated of a wave of international
criminal tribunals (ICTs) built in the 1990s and designed to
advance liberalism through international criminal law. Model(ing)
Justice examines the practice and case law of the ICTY to make a
novel theoretical analysis of the structural flaws inherent in ICTs
as institutions that inhibit their contribution to social peace and
prosperity. Kerstin Bree Carlson proposes a seminal analysis of the
structural challenges to ICTs as socially constitutive
institutions, setting the agenda for future considerations of how
international organizations can perform and disseminate the goals
articulated by political liberalism.
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