
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 18, no. 3, July 2020) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
- Aldo Zammit Borda, History in International Criminal Trials: The ‘Crime-driven Lens’ and Its Blind Spots
- Hannes Jöbstl,
Bridging the Accountability Gap: Armed Non-state Actors and the Investigation and Prosecution of War Crimes
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Symposium: The Extraordinary Chambers in Cambodia: Revisiting the Experiment
- Paolo Lobba & Niccolò Pons, Rethinking the Legacy of the ECCC: Selectivity, Accountability, Ownership
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Diane Orentlicher, ‘Worth the Effort’? Assessing the Khmer Rouge Tribunal
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Göran Sluiter & Marc Tiernan, The Right to an Effective Defence During ECCC Investigations
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Natasha Naidu & Sarah Williams, The Function and Dysfunction of the Pre-Trial Chamber at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
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Kai Ambos, The ECCC’s Contribution to Substantive ICL: The Notion of ‘Civilian Population’ in the Context of Crimes Against Humanity
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Elinor Fry & Elies van Sliedregt, Targeted Groups, Rape and Dolus Eventualis: Assessing the ECCC’s Contributions to Substantive International Criminal Law
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Sergey Vasiliev, ECCC Appeals: Appraising the Supreme Court Chamber’s Interventions
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Yvonne McDermott, The ECCC’s Approach to Evidence and Proof
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Cases Before International Courts and Tribunals
- Daley J Birkett, Managing Frozen Assets at the International Criminal Court: The Fallout of the Bemba Acquittal