
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 19, no. 3, July 2021) is out. Contents include:
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Thijs B Bouwknegt, Genocide Never Sleeps. Living Law at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
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Bertram Schmitt, Legal Diversity at the International Criminal Court: Reflections of a Judge
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Chile Eboe-Osuji, The Cause of all Humanity: Why the United States should support the International Criminal Court
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María García-Casas, The Crime of Unconstitutional Change of Government: Concept and Main Hurdles in Its Implementation
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Lawrence Douglas, The United States and the ICC: The Court that Cannot Operate Against Us
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Raghavi Viswanath, Hate Crimes Against Minorities in India: Locating the Value of an International Criminal Law Discourse?
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Marina Lostal, De-objectifying Animals: Could they Qualify as Victims before the International Criminal Court?
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Matt Halling, Guénaёl Mettraux, International Crimes: Law and Practice, Volume I: Genocide
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Claus Kreß, Peter Frank, & Christoph Barthe, Functional Immunity of Foreign State Officials Before National Courts: A Legal Opinion by Germany’s Federal Public Prosecutor General
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Gabriella Citroni, Consequences of the Lack of Criminalization of Enforced Disappearance at the Domestic Level: The Italian Experience
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Sven Peterke & Carlos Vasconcelos, Born Under a Bad Sign: Was There a Widespread or Systematic Attack Against Rio de Janeiro’s Favela Population in 2018?
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Keiichiro Kawai, Who Enforces an Arrest Warrant of the International Criminal Court? An Assessment of the ICC Appeals Chamber’s Surrogation of Jurisdiction Theory from the Perspective of International Organizations Law
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Gabrielle McIntyre, The ICC, Self-created Challenges and Missed Opportunities to Legitimize Authority over Non-states Parties