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Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court: (Record no. 14197)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 06511nam a22001937a 4500
005 - DATE & TIME
control field 20160105155551.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 160105b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 ## - ISBN
International Standard Book Number 9780199258970
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Original cataloging agency NLUO
041 ## - LANGUAGE
Language
082 ## - DDC NUMBER
Classification number 345.01
Book Number CAS/ROM
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Cassese, Antonio
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court:
Sub Title A Commentary (Vol. 2)
Statement of responsibility, etc. by Antonio Cassese
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc New York :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc OUP,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2002.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Pages 1051 - 2018 p.
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Table of contents:<br/>Volume I: 1. The Path to Rome and Beyond<br/>1: Antonio Cassese: From Nuremburg to Rome: From Ad Hoc International Criminal Tribunals to the International Criminal Court<br/>2: The Drafting History and Further Developments<br/>2.1: James Crawford: The Work of the International Law Commission<br/>2.2: Adriaan Bos: From the International Law Commission to the Rome Conference (1994 - 1998)<br/>2.3: Philippe Kirsch, QC and Darryl Robinson: Reaching Agreement at the Rome Conference<br/>2.4: Philippe Kirsch, QC, and Valerie Oosterveld: The Post-Rome Conference Preparatory Commission<br/>2.5: William R. Pace and Jennifer Schense: The Role of Non-Governmental Organizations<br/>3.: Alain Pellet: Entry into Force and Amendment of the Statute<br/>2. Structure of the ICC4.: The Court<br/>4.1: Adriaan Bos: Seat of the Court<br/>4.2: Francesca Martines: Legal Status and Powers of the Court<br/>4.3: Luigi Condorelli and Santiago Villalpando: Relationship of the Court with the United Nations<br/>4.4: John R. W. D. Jones: Composition of the Court<br/>5.: John R. W. D. Jones: The Office of the Prosecutor<br/>6.: John R. W. D. Jones: The Registry and Staff<br/>7.: John R. W. D. Jones: Duties of Officials<br/>8.: Herve Ascensio: Privileges and Immunities<br/>9.: Adriaan Bos: Assembly of States Parties<br/>10: Mahnoush Arsanjani: Financing<br/>3. Jurisdiction11.: Jurisdiction ratione materiae (Subject-Matter Jurisdiction)<br/>11.1: Antonio Cassese: Genocide<br/>11.2: Antonio Cassese: Crimes Against Humanity<br/>11.3: Michael Bothe: War Crimes<br/>11.4: Giorgio Gaja: The Long Journey Towards Repressing Aggression<br/>11.5: Mauro Politi: Elements of the Crimes<br/>11.6: Susanne Walther: Cumulation of Offences<br/>11.7: Patrick Robinson: The Missing Crimes<br/>12: Micaela Frulli: Jurisdiction ratione personae<br/>13: Stephane Bourgon: Jurisdiction ratione temporis<br/>14: Stephane Bourgon: Jurisdiction ratione loci<br/>15: Santiago Villalpando and Luigi Condorelli: Can the Security Council Extend the ICC's Jurisdiction?<br/>16: Hans-Peter Kaul: Preconditions to the Exercise of Jurisdiction<br/>17: `Trigger Mechanisms'<br/>17.1: Philippe Kirsch QC and Darryl Robinson: Referral by State Parties<br/>17.2: Luigi Condorelli and Santiago Villalpando: Referral and Deferral by the Security Council<br/>17.3: Philippe Kirsch and Darryl Robinson: Initiation of Proceedings by the Prosecutor<br/>18: Issues of Admissibility and Jurisdiction<br/>18.1: John T. Holmes: Complementarity: National Courts versus the ICC<br/>18.2: Michael Bohlander: Possible Conflicts of Jurisdiction with Ad Hoc International Tribunals<br/>18.3: John Dugard: Possible Conflicts of Jurisdiction with Truth Commissions<br/>18.4: Christine van den Wyngaert and Tom Ongena: Ne bis in idem Principle, including the Issue of Amnesty<br/>4.General Principles of International Criminal Law<br/>19: Susan Lamb: Nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege in International Criminal Law<br/>20: Albin Eser: Individual Criminal Responsibility<br/>21: Kai Ambos: Superior Responsibility<br/>22: Christine van den Wyngaert and John Dugard: Non-applicability of Statute of Limitations<br/>23: Albin Eser: Mental Elements - Mistakes of Fact and Law<br/>24: Defences<br/>24.1: Antonio Cassese: Justifications and Excuses in International Criminal Law<br/>24.2: Andreas Zimmerman: Superior Orders<br/>24.3: Paola Gaeta: Official Capacity and Immunities<br/>24.4: Kai Ambos: Other Grounds for Excluding Criminal Responsibility<br/>Volume II: 5. The Statute and General International Law<br/>25: Alain Pellet: Applicable Law<br/>26: Pierre Marie Dupuy: International Criminal Responsibility of the Individual and International Responsibility of the State<br/>27: Mohamed Bennouna: The Statute's Rules on Crimes and Existing or Developing International Law<br/>6. International Criminal Proceedings<br/>28: Fabricio Guariglia: The Rules of Procedure and Evidence - An Overview<br/>29: Investigation<br/>29.1: Giuliano Turone: Powers and Duties of the Prosecutor<br/>29.2: Salvatore Zappala: Rights of Persons During an Investigation<br/>30: Pre-Trial Proceedings<br/>30.1: Olivier Fourmy: Powers of the Pre-Trial Chambers<br/>30.2: Michele Marchesiello: Proceedings Before the Pre-Trial Chamber<br/>30.3: Bert Swart: Arrest Proceedings in the Custodial State<br/>31: Trial Proceedings<br/>31.1: Frank Terrier: Powers of the Trial Chamber<br/>31.2: Frank Terrier: Proceedings before the Trial Chamber<br/>31.3: Salvatore Zappala: The Rights of the Accused<br/>31.4: John R. W. D. Jones: Protection of Victims and Witnesses<br/>31.5: Peter Malanczuk: Protection of National Security Interests<br/>32: Claude Jorda and Jerome de Hemptinne: The Status and Role of the Victim<br/>33: Steven Kay QC and Bert Swart: The Role of the Defence<br/>34: Alphons Orie: Accusatorial versus Inquisitorial Approach in International Criminal Proceedings<br/>35: William A. Schabas: Penalties<br/>36: Robert Roth and Marc Henzelin: The Appeal Procedure of the ICC<br/>37: Anne-Marie La Rosa: Revision Procedure under the ICC Statute<br/>38: Salvatore Zappala': Compensation to an Arrested or Convicted Person<br/>7. International Cooperation and Judicial Assistance<br/>39: Bert Swart: General Problems<br/>40: Annalisa Ciampi: The Obligation to Cooperate<br/>41: Bert Swart: Arrest and Surrender<br/>42: Annalisa Ciampi: Other Forms of Cooperation<br/>8. Enforcement<br/>43: Claus Kress and Goran Sluiter: Preliminary Remarks<br/>44: Claus Kress and Goran Sluiter: Imprisonment<br/>45: Claus Kress and Goran Sluiter: Fines and Forfeiture Orders<br/>9. Application and Impact of the Rome Statute<br/>46: Alain Pellet: Settlement of Disputes<br/>47: Darryl Robinson: The Rome Statute and its Impact on National Law<br/>48: Gennady M. Danilenko: ICC Statute and Third States<br/>10.Final Analysis and Suggestions<br/>49: The Board of Editors: The Rome Statute: A Tentative Assessment<br/>50: Mireille Delmas-Marty: The ICC and the Interaction of International and National Legal Systems<br/>51: Robert Badinter: International Criminal Justice: From Dusk to Dawn<br/>Materials Volume The Text of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court<br/>Rules of Procedure and Evidence<br/>Elements of the Crimes
650 ## - SUBJECT
Subject International Criminal Court.
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type Book
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Koha collection Location (home branch) Sublocation or collection (holding branch) Date acquired Koha issues (times borrowed) Koha full call number Barcode (Accession No.) Koha date last seen Koha date last borrowed Price effective from Koha item type
    Dewey Decimal Classification     Reference NLUO NLUO 05/01/2016 15 345.01 CAS/ROM 13106 04/09/2023 01/09/2023 05/01/2016 Reference

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