Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Stahn & van den Herik: Future Perspectives on International Criminal Justice

Carsten Stahn (Leiden Univ. - Law) & Larissa van den Herik (Leiden Univ. - Law) have published Future Perspectives on International Criminal Justice (T.M.C. Asser Press 2010). Contents include:
  • Gerry Simpson, 'Satires of circumstance': some notes on war crimes trials and irony
  • Alette Smeulers & Wouter Werner, The banality of evil on trial
  • Harmen van der Wilt, Why international criminal lawyers should read Mirjan Damaška
  • Tamás Hoffmann, The gentle humanizer of humanitarian law - Antonio Cassese and the creation of the customary law of non-international armed conflict
  • Christoph Burchard, The international criminal legal process: towards a realistic model of international criminal law in action
  • Darryl Robinson, The two liberalisms of international criminal law
  • Kai Ambos, International criminal law at the crossroads: from ad hoc imposition to a treaty-based universal system
  • Frédéric Mégret, In search of the 'vertical': towards an institutional theory of international criminal justice's core
  • Kevin Jon Heller, Situational gravity under the Rome Statute
  • Mark Osiel, When law 'expresses' more than it cares to admit: comments on Heller
  • Dawn Sedman, Should the prosecution of ordinary crimes in domestic jurisdictions satisfy the complementarity principle?
  • Marta Valiñas, Interpreting complementarity and interests of justice in the presence of restorative-based alternative forms of justice
  • Elizabeth Santalla, Universal jurisdiction and the prosecution of excluded asylum seekers
  • Scott Doucet, The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the aggravated state responsibility operationalizing the concept of state crime
  • Larissa van den Herik, Corporations as future subjects of the International Criminal Court: an exploration of the counterarguments and consequences
  • Dan Kuwali, Gray war zone? The question of contractual control of the privatization of warfare and the civilianization of the military
  • Materneau Crispin, Holding private military companies accountable for their crimes: the applicability of the commander/superior responsibility doctrine
  • Astrid Reisinger, Defining the crime of aggression
  • Nicolaos Strapatsas, Complementarity and aggression: a ticking time bomb?
  • Michael E. Kurth, The recruitment and use of child soldiers: some reflections on the prosecution of a new war crime
  • Gideon Boas, The difficulty with individual criminal responsibility in international criminal law
  • Héctor Olásolo, Current trends on modes of liability for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes
  • Athanasios Chouliaras, From 'conspiracy' to 'joint criminal enterprise': in search of the organizational parameter
  • Göran Sluiter, Trends in the development of a unified law of international criminal procedure
  • Alexander Zahar, Witness memory and the manufacture of evidence at the international criminal tribunals
  • Liesbeth Zegveld, Remedies for war victims
  • Nino Tsereteli, Victim participation in ICC proceedings
  • Carsten Stahn, Arrest and surrender under the ICC Statute: a contextual reading