
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 17, no. 1, March 2019) is out. Contents include:
- Debate
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Max du Plessis, The Crimes Against Humanity Convention, (Overlooked) African Lessons, and the Delicate Dance of Immunity
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Articles
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Kenneth A Rodman, When Justice Leads, Does Politics Follow? The Realist Limits of Prosecutorial Agency in Marginalizing War Criminals
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Thomas Weatherall, Inviolability Not Immunity: Re-evaluating the Execution of International Arrest Warrants by Domestic Authorities of Receiving States
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Mark A Drumbl, From Timbuktu to The Hague and Beyond: The War Crime of Intentionally Attacking Cultural Property
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Symposium: The Accused as Actor of International Criminal Justice
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Frédéric Mégret & Damiel Scalia, Foreword
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Alette Smeulers, Why Serious International Crimes Might Not Seem ‘Manifestly Unlawful’ to Low-level Perpetrators: A Social–Psychological Approach to Superior Orders
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Kjell Anderson, Judicial Inference of the ‘Intent to Destroy’: A Critical, Socio-legal Analysis
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Frédéric Mégret & Marika Giles Samson, Defiance, Defence, Repentance and What Lies Between: Assessing Defendants’ Shifting Postures Before International Criminal Tribunals
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Marie-Sophie Devresse & Damien Scalia, An Outsider’s View from Inside: The Experience of Acquittals before International Criminal Tribunals