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Crimes against humanity : the limits of universal jurisdiction in the global south / Nergis Canefe.

By: Material type: TextSeries: International law (University of Wales Press)Publisher: Cardiff : University of Wales Press, 2021Description: xviii, 318 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1786837021
  • 9781786837028
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 345.0235 23
LOC classification:
  • KZ7145 .C36 2021
Contents:
Introduction -- 1. Topographies of universal jurisdiction in international law, legal pluralism and the curious case of the International Criminal Court -- 2. Universal jurisdiction and genealogies of international criminal law -- 3. Crimes against humanity jurisprudence in international law and the conundrum of jurisdictional certainty -- 4. Mea culpa, sua culpa, tua maxima culpa: collective responsibility, societal wrongdoing and legal judgment -- 5. Through the looking glass: hybrid courts and international criminal law in the global South -- In lieu of conclusion: deliverance of justice in international criminal law and the role of political judgment as purposive action.
Summary: Currently, there is an engorging fascination with and heightened expectations from international legal accountability. Crimes Against Humanity examines whether international criminal law, in particular legislation and institutions pertaining to war crimes and crimes against humanity, is equipped to be a panacea for the ills of the recalcitrant nation-state system. The main thread that runs through the text is to determine the ultimate aim and efficacy of adjudicating some of the most egregious infractions of the internationally sanctioned human rights regime. While international criminal law strives to develop a shared understanding of, and golden standards for, acceptable behavior of states and governments, it also suffers from a degree of institutional idealism pertaining to current accountability regimes in public international law. Focusing on the Global South, it also examines the problem-laden notion of collective responsibility for societal and political mass crimes and questions the merits of disproportionate reliance on international criminal law in the aftermath of civil wars, ethnic cleansing, genocidal violence, and mass exodus. -- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-302) and index.

Currently, there is an engorging fascination with and heightened expectations from international legal accountability. Crimes Against Humanity examines whether international criminal law, in particular legislation and institutions pertaining to war crimes and crimes against humanity, is equipped to be a panacea for the ills of the recalcitrant nation-state system. The main thread that runs through the text is to determine the ultimate aim and efficacy of adjudicating some of the most egregious infractions of the internationally sanctioned human rights regime. While international criminal law strives to develop a shared understanding of, and golden standards for, acceptable behavior of states and governments, it also suffers from a degree of institutional idealism pertaining to current accountability regimes in public international law. Focusing on the Global South, it also examines the problem-laden notion of collective responsibility for societal and political mass crimes and questions the merits of disproportionate reliance on international criminal law in the aftermath of civil wars, ethnic cleansing, genocidal violence, and mass exodus. -- Provided by publisher.

Introduction -- 1. Topographies of universal jurisdiction in international law, legal pluralism and the curious case of the International Criminal Court -- 2. Universal jurisdiction and genealogies of international criminal law -- 3. Crimes against humanity jurisprudence in international law and the conundrum of jurisdictional certainty -- 4. Mea culpa, sua culpa, tua maxima culpa: collective responsibility, societal wrongdoing and legal judgment -- 5. Through the looking glass: hybrid courts and international criminal law in the global South -- In lieu of conclusion: deliverance of justice in international criminal law and the role of political judgment as purposive action.

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