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This book confronts the problem of the legal uncertainty
surrounding the definition and classification of ethnic cleansing,
exploring whether the use of the term ethnic cleansing constitutes
a valuable contribution to legal understanding and praxis. The
premise underlying this book is that acts of ethnic cleansing are,
first and foremost, a criminal issue and must therefore be
precisely placed within the context of the international law order.
In particular, it addresses the question of the specificity of the
act and its relation to existing categories of international crime,
exploring the relationship between ethnic cleansing and genocide,
but also extending to war crimes and crimes against humanity. The
book goes on to show how the current understanding of ethnic
cleansing singularly fails to provide an efficient instrument for
identification, and argues that the act, in having its own
distinctive characteristics, conditions and exigencies, ought to be
granted its own classification as a specific independent crime.
Ethnic Cleansing: A Legal Qualification, will be of particular
interest to students and scholars of International Law and
Political Science.
This book confronts the problem of the legal uncertainty
surrounding the definition and classification of ethnic cleansing,
exploring whether the use of the term ethnic cleansing constitutes
a valuable contribution to legal understanding and praxis. The
premise underlying this book is that acts of ethnic cleansing are,
first and foremost, a criminal issue and must therefore be
precisely placed within the context of the international law order.
In particular, it addresses the question of the specificity of the
act and its relation to existing categories of international crime,
exploring the relationship between ethnic cleansing and genocide,
but also extending to war crimes and crimes against humanity. The
book goes on to show how the current understanding of ethnic
cleansing singularly fails to provide an efficient instrument for
identification, and argues that the act, in having its own
distinctive characteristics, conditions and exigencies, ought to be
granted its own classification as a specific independent crime.
Ethnic Cleansing: A Legal Qualification, will be of particular
interest to students and scholars of International Law and
Political Science.
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