
The latest issue of the
Journal of International Criminal Justice (Vol. 14, no. 3, July 2016) is out. Contents include:
- In Memoriam: John R.W.D. Jones
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Articles
- Andreas Zimmermann,
Finally … Or Would Rather Less Have Been More?: The Recent Amendment on the Deletion of Article 124 of the Rome Statute and the Continued Quest for the Universality of the International Criminal Court
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Richard Ashby Wilson,
Propaganda and History in International Criminal Trials
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Leila Ullrich,
Beyond the ‘Global–Local Divide’: Local Intermediaries, Victims and the Justice Contestations of the International Criminal Court
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Symposium: The Italian Constitutional Court Judgment 238/2014: On State Immunity and
Fundamental Principles of the Constitutional Order
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Valentina Spiga,
Foreword
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Riccardo Pavoni,
How Broad is the Principle Upheld by the Italian Constitutional Court in Judgment No. 238?
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Micaela Frulli,
‘Time Will Tell Who Just Fell and Who’s Been Left Behind’: On the Clash between the International Court of Justice and the Italian Constitutional Court
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Massimo Iovane,
The Italian Constitutional Court Judgment No. 238 and the Myth of the ‘Constitutionalization’ of International Law
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Gianluigi Palombella,
German War Crimes and the Rule of International Law
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Martin Scheinin,
The Italian Constitutional Court’s Judgment 238 of 2014 Is Not Another Kadi Case
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Raffaela Kunz,
The Italian Constitutional Court and ‘Constructive Contestation’: A Miscarried Attempt?
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Francesco Francioni,
Access to Justice and Its Pitfalls: Reparation for War Crimes and the Italian Constitutional Court
- Cases before International Courts and Tribunals
- Kevin Jon Heller,
Radical Complementarity
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Janine Natalya Clark,
The First Rape Conviction at the ICC: An Analysis of the Bemba Judgment
- Hightlights
- Fergal Gaynor, Katerina I. Kappos, & Patrick Hayden,
Current Developments at the International Criminal Court