
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 15, no. 4, September 2017) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
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Hannah Woolaver & Emma Palmer, Challenges to the Independence of the International Criminal Court from the Assembly of States Parties
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Frederick Cowell, Inherent Imperialism: Understanding the Legal Roots of Anti-imperialist Criticism of the International Criminal Court
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Cristina Fernández-Pacheco Estrada, The International Criminal Court and the Čelebići Test: Cumulative Convictions Based on the Same Set of Facts from a Comparative Perspective
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Rachel Killean & Luke Moffett, Victim Legal Representation before the ICC and ECCC
- Symposium: Obstruction of Justice: Continued Challenges before International Tribunals
- Lucy Richardson, Offences against the Administration of Justice at the International Criminal Court: Robbing Peter to Pay Paul?
- Matthew Gillett, Testing the Limits of the Law against Those Who Test the Tribunal’s Limits: Contempt Proceedings at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon
- Cases Before International Courts and Tribunals
- Charles Chernor Jalloh, The Nature of the Crimes in the African Criminal Court
- National Prosecution of International Crimes: Legislation and Cases
- Paul Bradfield, Reshaping Amnesty in Uganda: The Case of Thomas Kwoyelo