This chapter argues that the very first situation before the International Criminal Court is illustrative of how the globalisation of international criminal justice amplifies some voices while silencing others. The chapter shows how in northern Uganda the globalisation of criminal justice offered a site for what Martti Koskenniemi has called ‘the politics of re-description’ and we give four examples: (1) the struggle between a military approach and reconciliation efforts in the period prior to ICC intervention; (2) the ICC referral as a way to re-describe the conflict and to continue a military approach; (3) the Juba peace process as a negotiation between legal and other approaches and (4) the post-Juba period, in which a political agreement is approached legalistically.
Monday, August 27, 2018
Nouwen & Ten Kate: The Globalisation of Justice: Amplifying and Silencing Voices at the ICC
Sarah Nouwen (Univ. of Cambridge - Law) & Warner Ten Kate (United Nations) have posted The Globalisation of Justice: Amplifying and Silencing Voices at the ICC (in Global Justice, Jeff Handmaker & Karin Arts eds., forthcoming). Here's the abstract: