Sunday, May 12, 2013

New Issue: International Criminal Law Review

The latest issue of the International Criminal Law Review (Vol. 13, no. 1, 2013) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Issue: The Realities of International Criminal Justice
    • Alette Smeulers, Barbora Hola, & Tom van den Berg, Sixty-Five Years of International Criminal Justice: The Facts and Figures
    • Stephan Parmentier & Elmar Weitekamp, Punishing Perpetrators or Seeking Truth for Victims: Serbian Opinions on Dealing with War Crimes
    • Kenneth A. Rodman, Justice is Interventionist: The Political Sources of the Judicial Reach of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
    • Giorgia Tortora, The Financing of the Special Tribunals for Sierra Leone, Cambodia and Lebanon
    • Cedric Ryngaert, State Cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
    • Rosa Aloisi, A Tale of Two Institutions: The United Nations Security Council and the International Criminal Court
    • James Meernik, Justice, Power and Peace: Conflicting Interests and the Apprehension of ICC Suspects
    • Dawn L. Rothe & Victoria E. Collins, The International Criminal Court: A Pipe Dream to End Impunity?
    • Isabella Bueno & Andrea Diaz Rozas, Which Approach to Justice in Colombia under the Era of the ICC
    • Steven C. Roach, Multilayered Justice in Northern Uganda: ICC Intervention and Local Procedures of Accountability
    • Jonathan O’Donohue, Financing the International Criminal Court
    • Mark Findlay, Enunciating Genocide: Crime, Rights and the Impact of Judicial Intervention