Friday, July 10, 2009

Doria, Gasser, & Bassiouni: The Legal Regime of the International Criminal Court

José Doria, Hans-Peter Gasser & M. Cherif Bassiouni have published The Legal Regime of the International Criminal Court: Essays in Honour of Professor Igor Blishchenko (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 2009). Contents include:
  • Jackson Maogoto, Early efforts to establish an International Criminal Court
  • Hisakazu Fugita, The Tokyo Trial Revisited
  • Jackson Maogoto, The Work of National Military Tribunals under Control Council Law 10
  • Jackson Maogoto, The Experience of the Ad hoc Tribunals
  • William Schabas, Customary Law or "Judge-Made" Law: Judicial Creativity at the UN Criminal Tribunals
  • Frits Kalshoven, Bombardment: From "Brussels 1874" to "Sarajevo 2003"
  • Jose Doria, The relationship between complicity modes of liability and crimes requiring specific intent
  • Mark Harmon, Plea-Bargaining: the uninvited guest at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • Fergal Gaynor, Provisional release in the law of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • Almiro Rodrigues, Undue delay and the ICTY’s Experience of Status Conferences: A Judge’s personal annotations
  • Jose Doria, The Work of the Special Court for Sierra Leone through its jurisprudence
  • Richard Burchill, From East Timor to Timor–Leste: A Demonstration of the Limits of International Law in the Pursuit of Justice
  • Avril McDonald, Bosnia’s War Crimes Chambers and the Challenges of an Opening and Closure
  • Hirad Abtai, The Judges of the International Criminal Court and the organization of their work
  • Jan Wouters, Sten Verhoeven, & Bruno Demeyere, The International Criminal Court’s Office of the Prosecutor: Navigating between Independence and Accountability?
  • Jose Doria & Anna Doria, The support work of the Court’s Registry
  • W. Czaplinski, Jus Cogens, obligations Erga omnes and international Criminal Responsibility
  • Christopher L. Blakesley, Jurisdction ratione personae or the Personal reach of the Court's jurisdiction
  • Nigel White & Robert Cryer, The ICC and the Security Council: An uncomfortable relationship
  • Lindsay Moir, Conduct of hostilities war crimes in international armed conflicts
  • Judith Gardam, Crimes involving disproportionate means and methods of warfare under the Statute of the International Criminal Court
  • Sergei Egorov, International legal protection for persons hors de combat
  • Matthew Happold, Child recruitment as a crime under the ICC’s Statute
  • Lindsay Moir, Particular issues regarding war crimes in internal armed conflicts
  • Lindsay Moir, Violations of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions
  • Lindsay Moir, Displacement of Civilians as a war crime other than violation of Common Article 3 in internal Armed Conflicts
  • Jose Doria, Whether crimes against humanity are backdoor war crimes
  • Roger S. Clark, The crime of aggression
  • Charles Garraway, The Doctrine of Command responsibility
  • Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops, The transposition of military commander’s discretion onto International Criminal Responsibility for Military Commanders: An increasing legal-political Dilemma within International criminal Justice
  • Eric David, Official capacity and immunity of an accused before the International Criminal Court
  • Eric David, Self-defence and state of necessity in the Statute of the ICC
  • Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops, The diverging position of criminal law defences before the ICTY and the ICC: contemporary developments
  • Silvia Fernandez de Gurmendi & Hakan Friman, The Rules of Procedure and Evidence and the Regulations of the Court
  • Vladimir Tochilovsky, Charging in the ICC and relevant jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals
  • Vladimir Tochilovsky, Prosecution Disclosure obligations in the ICC and relevant jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals
  • Josee d’Aoust, The Conduct of Trials
  • Theo van Boven, Victims’ rights and interests in the International Criminal Court
  • Ilaria Bottigliero, Ensuring effective participation and adequate redress for victims: challenges ahead for the ICC
  • Eric Myjer, Uniform Justice and the death penalty
  • Jose Doria, Standards of Appeals and Standards of Revision
  • Daniel N’Sereko, Cooperation with the Court on matters of Arrest and surrender of Indicted Fugitives: Lessons from the ad hoc Tribunals and national jurisdictions
  • Shabtai Rosenne, The International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice
  • Robert Kolb, International Humanitarian Law and its Implementation by the Court
  • Ruth Wedgwood, The International Criminal Court: reviewing the case (An American point of view)
  • Yves Sandoz, The dynamic but complex relationship between international Penal Law and International humanitarian law
  • Lyal S. Sunga, Ten principles for reconciling truth commissions and criminal prosecutions
  • Aslan Abashidze & Elena Trikoz, ICC Statute and the ratification saga in the States of the Community of Independent States
  • Hans-Peter Gasser, The Changing relationship between International Criminal Law, Human rights law and International humanitarian Law