书籍 THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND COMPLEMENTARITY VOLUME I的封面

THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND COMPLEMENTARITY VOLUME IPDF电子书下载

CARSTEN STAHN AND MOHAMED M.EL ZEIDY

购买点数

19

出版社

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

出版时间

2011

ISBN

0521763878

标注页数

682 页

PDF页数

707 页

标签

图书目录

Introduction: bridge over troubled waters?&CARSTEN STAHN 1

1 Introduction 1

2 Objectives and institutional dimensions 4

3 Origin and historical heritage of complementarity 5

4 Theorization and analytical dimensions of complementarity 6

5 Interpretation and application of the Rome Statute 8

6 Complementarity in perspective 12

7 Complementarity in practice 13

8 Not a conclusion 15

PART I General reflections 19

1 A positive approach to complementarity: the impact of the Office of the Prosecutor&LUIS MORENO-OCAMPO 21

1 The Rome Statute as the foundation of a global criminal justice system 21

2 The meaning of complementarity 23

3 Policy and practice of the Office of the Prosecutor 24

4 Maximizing impact 29

5 Conclusion 32

2 Justice and prevention&JUAN E. MENDEZ 33

1 Introduction 33

2 Prevention in international law 34

3 Conditions for justice to have a preventive effect 35

4 Prevention in recent international practice 38

5 Practice of the ICC 40

6 Prevention and complementarity 46

7 Conclusion 50

3 Proactive complementarity: a Registrar's perspective and plans&SILVANA ARBIA AND GIOVANNI BASSY 52

1 Introduction 52

2 The legal framework 53

3 Proactive versus passive complementarity 54

4 Opportunities for the Registry 57

5 Conclusion 66

PART II Origin and genesis of complementarity 69

4 The genesis of complementarity&MOHAMED M. EL ZEIDY 71

1 Introduction 72

2 World War I peace treaties 78

3 Post-World War I complementarity models 90

4 Conclusion 137

5 Reflections on complementarity at the Rome Conference and beyond&MAURO POLITI 142

1 Introduction 142

2 Complementarity at the Rome Conference 143

3 Complementarity beyond the Rome Conference 146

6 The rise and fall of complementarity&WILLIAM A. SCHABAS 150

1 Introduction 150

2 Positive complementarity' 155

3 Inactivity: the unwritten criterion for complementarity 158

4 Inactivity and inappropriate selection of cases 161

5 Concluding remarks 163

PART III Analytical dimensions of complementarity 165

7 Complementarity as global governance&CHRISTOPH BURCHARD 167

1 Introduction 168

2 Problems and solutions to why regulatory policies fail to meet their goals 171

3 Actor openness 186

4 Characteristics, quality and structure of the milieu of complementarity 189

5 Outlook 195

8 Policy through complementarity: the atrocity trial as justice&MARK A. DRUMBL 197

1 Introduction 198

2 The treaty framework: text and effect 200

3 Complementarity and state behavior 211

4 Towards qualified deference 222

5 Conclusion 231

9 Taking complementarity seriously&CARSTEN STAHN 233

1 Introduction 233

2 The normative embedding of complementarity 236

3 Classical complementarity and its variations 251

4 'Positive' complementarity 260

5 Constraints 273

6 Conclusions 281

10 International criminal justice in the era of failed states: the ICC and the self-referral debate&PAYAM AKHAVAN 283

1 Introduction 284

2 The self-referral revolution in global justice 286

3 Necessity of the self-referral mechanism 292

4 Scenarios where self-referral is vital 299

5 Conclusion: cooperative global justice in a world of extremes 302

11 The quest for constructive complementarity&MICHAEL A. NEWTON 304

1 Introduction 305

2 Early precedents eroding the law of command responsibility 309

3 Is the Court corroding complementarity? 313

4 Is the Prosecutor warping the gravity threshold? 329

5 Recommendations for revitalizing a constructive complementarity 333

6 Conclusion 339

12 Reframing positive complementarity&WILLIAM W. BURKE-WHITE 341

1 Introduction 341

2 Positive complementarity in the first eight years: theory, policy and practice 343

3 Reframing positive complementarity: the US federal criminal justice system as a possible model 353

13 Too much of a good thing?: implementation and the uses of complementarity&FREDERIC MEGRET 361

1 Introduction 361

2 Scope of implementation 364

3 Implementation as a Trojan horse? 367

4 The reality of complementarity 376

5 Some illustrations 380

6 Conclusion 386

PART IV Interpretation and application 391

14 The application of the principle of complementarity to the decision of where to open an investigation: the admissibility of 'situations'&HECTOR OLASOLO AND ENRIQUE CARNERO-ROJO 393

1 Introduction 394

2 Distinction between situations and cases 396

3 The notion of admissibility of situations 402

4 Assessing the admissibility of situations 412

5 Conclusion 419

15 Situation and case: defining the parameters&ROD RASTAN 421

1 Introduction 421

2 What is a situation? 422

3 What is a case? 437

4 Investigation and prosecution 445

5 Between situation and case 454

6 Impact of prosecutorial policy 458

16 The inaction controversy: neglected words and new opportunities&DARRYL ROBINSON 460

1 Introduction 461

2 Textual demonstration: Article 17 expressly requires national proceedings 463

3 Enduring grip of the slogan version 475

4 Factors contributing to the interpretive disconnect? 489

5 Implications 498

17 The admissibility procedures&JO STIGEN 503

1 Introduction 504

2 Admissibility at the different stages of the ICC proceedings 504

3 Admissibility and the Prosecutor's preliminary examination 506

4 Preliminary rulings regarding admissibility 511

5 Challenges to the admissibility of a case 532

18 The evolution of the ICC jurisprudence on admissibility&BEN BATROS 558

1 Introduction 558

2 A brief history of admissibility proceedings before the ICC 560

3 Test for admissibility determinations under the Rome Statute 569

4 Basis for an admissibility determination 578

5 How and when admissibility determinations can be made 583

6 Purpose and focus of complementarity 589

7 Conclusion: complementarity in context 596

19 Interpretative gravity under the Rome Statute&IGNAZ STEGMILLER 603

1 Introduction 604

2 Interpreting the ICC's notion of gravity 606

3 Common criteria for the (legal) gravity threshold 621

4 Conclusion 637

20 Complementarity and burden allocation&MEGAN A. FAIRLIE AND JOSEPH POWDERLY 642

1 Introduction 643

2 Necessity of determining proof allocation 645

3 Potentially applicable burdens and standards of proof 648

4 Application of complementarity in the context of Security Council referrals: Darfur 661

5 Challenges to admissibility under Article 19 667

6 Conclusion 681

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