49 research outputs found

    ‘Settling Accounts’ Revisited: Reconciling Global Norms with Local Agency

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    In the mid- to late-1980s, the discourse of transitional justice was shaped above all by the experience of countries in Latin America, where military forces continued to exercise autonomous power even after ceding formal authority to democratically elected governments. In this setting, while human rights professionals agreed that fledgling democracies should undertake prosecutions in accordance with their international legal obligations, they were divided over the question of whether further development of international obligations in respect of punishment was desirable. Nor was it clear what, precisely, international law already required. Writing in the early 1990s, the author of this essay concluded that States parties to certain international treaties were in general required to prosecute specific crimes. More generally, she argued, wholesale impunity for atrocious crimes was generally incompatible with States’ responsibility to ensure that individuals subject to their power enjoyed fundamental rights. But these duties, she wrote, should not be interpreted to require action incompatible with a nascent democracy\u27s political or legal capacity. In this essay, the author describes how her views have evolved in the past 15 years. Noting that international legal norms against impunity have grown increasingly strong and arguing that this trend has itself proved a powerful antidote to impunity, the author nonetheless affirms ‘the central importance of promoting the broad participation of victims and other citizens in the process of designing as well as implementing programmes of transitional justice’ and addresses the inherent tension between these values and norms

    International Criminal Law And The Cambodian Killing Fields

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    I have been asked to discuss various models that might be available to address crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge during its murderous reign in the 1970s

    The Imprint Of Kosovo On International Law

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    In several respects, international responses to recent developments in Kosovo have had a significant- in some respects, profound - impact on international la

    Politics by Other Means: The Law of the International Criminal Court

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    That Someone Guilty Be Punished: The Impact of the ICTY in Bosnia

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    Presents Bosnians' views of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in terms of ethnic cleansing victims' justice; achievements, failures, and performance; truth and acknowledgment of crimes; and impact on local courts' prosecutions

    ‘Settling Accounts’ Revisited: Reconciling Global Norms with Local Agency

    Get PDF
    In the mid- to late-1980s, the discourse of transitional justice was shaped above all by the experience of countries in Latin America, where military forces continued to exercise autonomous power even after ceding formal authority to democratically elected governments. In this setting, while human rights professionals agreed that fledgling democracies should undertake prosecutions in accordance with their international legal obligations, they were divided over the question of whether further development of international obligations in respect of punishment was desirable. Nor was it clear what, precisely, international law already required. Writing in the early 1990s, the author of this essay concluded that States parties to certain international treaties were in general required to prosecute specific crimes. More generally, she argued, wholesale impunity for atrocious crimes was generally incompatible with States’ responsibility to ensure that individuals subject to their power enjoyed fundamental rights. But these duties, she wrote, should not be interpreted to require action incompatible with a nascent democracy\u27s political or legal capacity. In this essay, the author describes how her views have evolved in the past 15 years. Noting that international legal norms against impunity have grown increasingly strong and arguing that this trend has itself proved a powerful antidote to impunity, the author nonetheless affirms ‘the central importance of promoting the broad participation of victims and other citizens in the process of designing as well as implementing programmes of transitional justice’ and addresses the inherent tension between these values and norms

    Criminalizing Hate Speech in the Crucible of Trial: Prosecutor v. Nahimana

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