
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 19, no. 5, November 2021) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
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Amina Adanan, Reflecting on the Genocide Convention in its Eighth Decade: How Universal Jurisdiction Developed over Genocide
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Ekaterina A Kopylova, The ‘Prosecutor Amicus Curiae’ at the International Criminal Tribunals
- Symposium: Application of ICL to Information and Communication
Technologies, in particular to Cyber-operations
- Jennifer Trahan, The Criminalization of Cyber-operations Under the Rome Statute
- Simon McKenzie, Cyber Operations against Civilian Data: Revisiting War Crimes
against Protected Objects and Property in the Rome Statute
- Cases Before International Courts and Tribunals
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Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Assembling Atrocity Archives for Syria: Assessing the Work of the CIJA and the IIIM
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Laura Di Gianfrancesco, The STL Still Struggles with the Method for Interpreting its Statute: The Ayyash et al. Trial Judgment Departs from the Tribunal’s ‘Tadić’ on the Identification of the Applicable Law
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Gaiane Nuridzhanian, A Second Bite at the Cherry: A Case for Introducing Revision of Tainted Acquittals into the Rome Statute
- National Prosecution of International Crimes: Legislation and Cases
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Aziz Epik, No Functional Immunity for Crimes under International Law before Foreign Domestic Courts: An Unequivocal Message from the German Federal Court of Justice