- Joseph Powderly, Judicial Interpretation at the ad hoc Tribunals: Method from Chaos?
- Fabián Raimondo, General Principles of Law, Judicial Creativity and the Development of International Criminal Law
- William A. Schabas, Judicial Activism and the Crime of Genocide
- L.J. van den Herik, Using Custom to Reconceptualize Crimes Against Humanity
- Shane Darcy, The Reinvention of War Crimes by the International Criminal Tribunals
- Niamh Hayes, Creating a Definition of Rape in International Law: the Contribution of the International Criminal Tribunals
- Robert Cryer, The ad hoc Tribunals and the Law of Command Responsibility: A Quiet Earthquake
- Mohamed Shahabuddeen, Judicial Creativity and Joint Criminal Enterprise
- Gideon Boas, Omission Liability at the International Criminal Tribunals - A Case for Reform
- Caroline Fournet, The Judicial Development of the Law of Defences by the International Criminal Tribunals
- Gillian Higgins, The Development of the Right to Self Representation before the International Criminal Tribunals
- Wayne Jordash & John Coughlan, The Right to be Informed of the Nature and Cause of the Charges: A Potentially Formidable Jurisprudential Legacy
- Göran Sluiter, Procedural Lawmaking at the International Criminal Tribunals
- Hakan Friman, Trying Cases at the International Criminal Tribunals in the Absence of the Accused?
- Fidelma Donlon, The Role of the Judges in the Definition and Implementation of the Completion Strategies of the International Criminal Tribunals
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Darcy & Powderly: Judicial Creativity at the International Criminal Tribunals
Shane Darcy (National Univ. of Ireland, Galway - Irish Centre for Human Rights) & Joseph Powderly (T.M.C. Asser Instituut) have published Judicial Creativity at the International Criminal Tribunals (Oxford Univ. Press 2011). Contents include:
Labels:
ICTR,
ICTY,
International Criminal Law,
Scholarship - Books