
The latest issue of the
International Criminal Law Review (Vol. 22, nos. 5-6, 2022) is out. Contents include:
- Special Issue: Transforming Evidence and Proof in International Criminal Trials
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Karen McGregor Richmond, Transforming Evidence and Proof in International Criminal Trials
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Nancy Amoury Combs, Evidentiary Deficiencies in International Criminal Law: Tracing the Trajectory from Ignored to Integral to Irrelevant
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Karen McGregor Richmond, Towards a Normative Assessment of Probative Value in International Criminal Adjudication
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Michelle Coleman, Right Without Remedy? The Development of the Presumption of Innocence at the International Criminal Court
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Demetra Fr. Sorvatzioti, Free Evaluation of Evidence: Does the ICC need a Law of Evidence?
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Diletta Marchesi, Intercepted Communications in the Ongwen Case: Lessons to Learn on Documentary Evidence at the icc
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Rafael Braga da Silva, Updating the Authentication of Digital Evidence in the International Criminal Court
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Kristina Hellwig, The Potential and the Challenges of Digital Evidence in International Criminal Proceedings
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Hillary Hubley, Bad Speech, Good Evidence: Content Moderation in the Context of Open-Source Investigations
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Karen McGregor Richmond & Sebastiano Antonio Piccolo, Between Fact and Opinion: The Sui Generis Approach to Expert Witness Testimony in International Criminal Trials
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Carola Lingaas, Dehumanising Ideology, Metaphors, and Psychological Othering as Evidence of Genocidal Intent
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Sigurd D’hondt, Juan Pablo Pérez-León-Acevedo, & Elena Barrett, The Indeterminacy of Precedent: Negotiating the Admissibility of Victim Participant Testimony before the International Criminal Court
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Alessandra Cuppini, Victims’ Proactive Role in the Evidence-Gathering Process at the icc: Toward an Expressivist Justice Model
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Anne Herzberg, The Role of UN Documentation in Shaping Narratives at the International Criminal Court and the Implications for the Rights of the Accused
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Tonny Raymond Kirabira, Technology as a Key Tool for the Prosecution of International Crimes: Lessons from Uganda
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Courtney Martin, Treaty-Based Regulation and Evidence-Extradition Agreements as Critical Tools in the Fight against International Criminal Wrongdoing
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Attila Nagy, Kosovo Specialist Chambers Jurisdiction and the International Criminal Court