International Criminal Law Practitioner Library: Volume 1, Forms of Responsibility in International Criminal Law

Bìa trước
Cambridge University Press, 3 thg 1, 2008
Volume I of the International Criminal Law Practitioner Library series focuses on the law of individual criminal responsibility applied in international criminal law, providing a thorough review of the forms of criminal responsibility. The authors present a critical analysis of the elements of individual criminal responsibility as set out in the statutory instruments of the international and hybrid criminal courts and tribunals and their jurisprudence. All elements are discussed, demystifying and untangling some of the confusion in the jurisprudence and literature on the forms of responsibility. The jurisprudence of the ICTY and the ICTR is the main focus of the book. Every trial and appeal judgement, as well as relevant interlocutory jurisprudence, up to 1 December 2006, has been surveyed, as has the relevant jurisprudence of other tribunals and the provisions in the legal instruments of the ICC, making this a highly relevant work.
 

Các trang được chọn

Nội dung

in the jurisprudence of the ad hoc Tribunals
10
Trial Judgements
109
Gacumbitsi
121
Superior responsibility
142
failure to prevent and the failure
224
rise to superior responsibility
237
Complicity and aiding and abetting
279
and complicity in genocide
291
Planning instigating and ordering
343
Concurrent convictions and sentencing
381
Conclusion
415
of responsibility
423
Index
430
Bản quyền

Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng

Giới thiệu về tác giả (2008)

Gideon Boas is a Senior Fellow of the Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law, University of Melbourne Law Faculty, a Sessional Lecturer at Monash University Faculty of Law, and a Senior Consultant, Education and Training, with Potter Farrelly and Associates.

James L. Bischoff is an Attorney-Adviser in the Office of the Legal Adviser of the United States Department of State. He participated in this series in his personal capacity, and the views expressed are his and his co-authors' own. They do not necessarily reflect the views or official positions of the United States Department of State or the United States Government.

Natalie L. Reid is an Associate with Debevoise and Plimpton LLP, New York.

Thông tin thư mục