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Volume II of the International Criminal Law Practitioner Library
series focuses on the core categories of international crimes:
crimes against humanity, genocide, and war crimes. The authors
present a comprehensive and critical review of the law on the
elements of these crimes and their underlying offences, and examine
how they interact with the forms of responsibility discussed in
Volume I. They also consider the effect of the focus in early ICTY
and ICTR proceedings on relatively low-level accused for the
development of legal definitions that are sometimes ill-suited for
leadership cases, where the accused had little or no physical
involvement in the crimes. The book's main focus is the
jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals, but the approaches of the
ICC and the various hybrid tribunals are also given significant
attention. The relevant jurisprudence up to 1 December 2007 has
been surveyed, making this a highly useful and timely work.
A comprehensive and invaluable reference work for practitioners,
academics, and students of international criminal law, this series
critically examines a complex and important legal area. Volume I
considers the criminal responsibility of individuals for the
commission of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide;
Volume II focuses on these core international crimes and discusses
their interaction with the forms of responsibility; and Volume III
provides an evaluation of international criminal procedure and the
rules and practices designed to ensure effective investigations and
fair trials.
Volume I of the International Criminal Law Practitioner Library
series focuses on the law of individual criminal responsibility
applied in international criminal law, providing a thorough review
of the forms of criminal responsibility. The authors present a
critical analysis of the elements of individual criminal
responsibility as set out in the statutory instruments of the
international and hybrid criminal courts and tribunals and their
jurisprudence. All elements are discussed, demystifying and
untangling some of the confusion in the jurisprudence and
literature on the forms of responsibility. The jurisprudence of the
ICTY and the ICTR is the main focus of the book. Every trial and
appeal judgement, as well as relevant interlocutory jurisprudence,
up to 1 December 2006, has been surveyed, as has the relevant
jurisprudence of other tribunals and the provisions in the legal
instruments of the ICC, making this a highly relevant work.
A comprehensive and invaluable reference work for practitioners,
academics and students of international criminal law, this series
critically examines a complex and important legal area. Volume I
considers the criminal responsibility of individuals for the
commission of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide;
Volume II focuses on these core international crimes and discusses
their interaction with the forms of responsibility; and Volume III
provides an evaluation of international criminal procedure and the
rules and practices designed to ensure effective investigations and
fair trials.
Volume II of the International Criminal Law Practitioner Library
series focuses on the core categories of international crimes:
crimes against humanity, genocide, and war crimes. The authors
present a comprehensive and critical review of the law on the
elements of these crimes and their underlying offences, and examine
how they interact with the forms of responsibility discussed in
Volume I. They also consider the effect of the focus in early ICTY
and ICTR proceedings on relatively low-level accused for the
development of legal definitions that are sometimes ill-suited for
leadership cases, where the accused had little or no physical
involvement in the crimes. The book's main focus is the
jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals, but the approaches of the
ICC and the various hybrid tribunals are also given significant
attention. The relevant jurisprudence up to 1 December 2007 has
been surveyed, making this a highly useful and timely work.
Volume I of the International Criminal Law Practitioner Library
series focuses on the law of individual criminal responsibility
applied in international criminal law, providing a thorough review
of the forms of criminal responsibility. The authors present a
critical analysis of the elements of individual criminal
responsibility as set out in the statutory instruments of the
international and hybrid criminal courts and tribunals and their
jurisprudence. All elements are discussed, demystifying and
untangling some of the confusion in the jurisprudence and
literature on the forms of responsibility. The jurisprudence of the
ICTY and the ICTR is the main focus of the book. Every trial and
appeal judgement, as well as relevant interlocutory jurisprudence,
up to 1 December 2006, has been surveyed, as has the relevant
jurisprudence of other tribunals and the provisions in the legal
instruments of the ICC, making this a highly relevant and timely
work.
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