Explring the boundaries of international criminal justice
edited by Ralph Henham and Mark Findlay.
- England : Ashgate pub., 2011.
- 283 p.
Table of contents: Chapter 1. introduction:rethinking international criminal justice? Part 1 Achieving justice in post-conflict societies Chapter 2. Mass atrocities:theories and concepts of accountability - on the schizophrenia of accountability Chapter 3. collective responsibility for global crime:Limitation with the liability paradigm Chapter 4. Victim's expectations towards justice in post conflict societies:a bottom- up perspectives Chapter 5. Marking international criminal procedure work:from theory to practice Chapter 6. should states bear the responsibility of imposing sanctions on its citizens who as witness commit crimes before the ICC? Part 2 International criminal justice as governance Chapter 7. Exclusion and inclusion :bio-politics and global governance through criminalisation Chapter 8. Contracting dynamics of global administrative measures and international criminal courts:cosmopolitanism, multilateral ism,state interests Chapter 9. Governing through globalised crime:thoughts on the transition from terror Chapter 10. evaluating sentencing as a force for achieving justice in international criminal trials Chapter 11. the paradox of global terrorism and community based security policing Index
9780754649793
International criminal courts. Criminal procedure (International law). Law--Criminal Law--General.