- Marina Aksenova, Introduction: Breaking the Cycle of Mass Atrocities: Criminological and Socio-Legal Approaches to International Criminal Law
- Christopher Harding, The Biology and Psychology of Atrocity and the Erasure of Memory
- Matilde Gawronski, International Criminalisation as a Pragmatic Institutional Process: The Cases of Dominic Ongwen at the International Criminal Court and Thomas Kwoyelo at the International Crimes Division in the Situationin Uganda
- Marina Aksenova, Solidarity as a Moral and Legal Basis for Crimes Against Humanity: A Durkheimian Perspective
- Colleen Rohan, The Hybrid System of International Criminal Law: A Work in Progress or Just a Noble Experiment?
- Kerstin Bree Carlson, Agents and Agency in International Criminal Law: Intent and the 'Special Part' of International Criminal Law
- Barbora Holá & Amani Chibashimba, Punishment in Transition: Empirical Comparison of Post-Genocide Sentencing Practices in Rwandan Domestic Courts and at the ICTR
- Milena Tripkovic, Not in Our Name! Visions of Community in International Criminal Justice
- Anette Bringedal Houge, Explaining (Away) Individual Agency: A Criminological Take on Direct Perpetrator Re-Presentations at the ICTY
- Stefan Harrendorf, Social Identity and International Crimes: Legitimate and Problematic Aspects of the 'Ordinary People' Hypothesis
- Elies van Sliedregt, Regional Criminal Justice, Corporate Criminal Liability and the Need for Non-Doctrinal Research
- Harmen van der Wilt, Breaking the Cycle of Collective Violence: International Criminal Law's Contribution
Sunday, May 12, 2019
Aksenova, van Sliedregt, & Parmentier: Breaking the Cycle of Mass Atrocities: Criminological and Socio-Legal Approaches in International Criminal Law
Marina Aksenova (IE Univ. - Law), Elies van Sliedregt (Leeds Univ. - Law), & Stephan Parmentier (KU Leuven - Law) have published Breaking the Cycle of Mass Atrocities: Criminological and Socio-Legal Approaches in International Criminal Law (Hart Publishing 2019). Contents includes: