System criminiality in international law
by Harmen van der Wilt.
- USA : CUP, 2009.
- 364p.
Table of contents: Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The policy context of International crimes Chapter 3. Why corporations kill and get away with it:the failure of law to cope with crime in organisations Chapter 4. Men and abstract entities: individual responsibility and collective guilt in international criminal law Chapter 5. A historical Perspective:from collective to individual responsibility and back Chapter 6. Command responsibility and organisationsherrschaft :ways of artibuting international crimes to the most responsible Chapter 7. Joint criminal enterprise and functional preparation Chapter 8. System criminality at the ICTY Chapter 9. Criminality of organisations under international law Chapter 10. Criminality of organisation:lessons from domestic law a comparative perspective Chapter 11. A collective accountability of organised armed groups for system crimes Chapter 12. Assumption and presupposition: state responsibility for system crimes Chapter 13. State responsibility for international crimes Chapter 14. Response of political organs to crimes by state Chapter 15. Conclusion and outlook index.