280 research outputs found

    European Approaches to Fighting Terrorism

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    PÄ senare tid har smarta mobila enheter fÄtt en allt större roll i vardagen och det finns en uppsjö av applikationer till dessa. Den som Àr uppmÀrksam kan upptÀcka att prestandan och anvÀndarupplevelsen kan variera kraftigt mellan olika applikationer. Prestandaoptimering Àr en viktig del i utvecklingsprocessen för mobila applikationer eftersom mobila enheter ofta har betydligt mer begrÀnsade resurser jÀmfört med till exempel persondatorer. Eftersom prestanda Àr komplext med mÄnga faktorer som spelar in kan man anvÀnda sig av verktyg för att underlÀtta optimeringsarbetet. För att hitta de mest lÀmpliga verktygen för prestandaoptimering av Android-applikationer har en utvÀrdering av en delmÀngd verktyg som finns pÄ marknaden utförts. UtvÀrderingen har fokuserat pÄ verktygens funktionalitet och effektivitet och mÄlet Àr att utifrÄn utvÀrderingsresultatet ge en rekommendation av de verktyg som Àr lÀmpligast att anvÀnda. Resultatet av utvÀrderingen visade pÄ att alla verktyg som utvÀrderats gav goda indikationer och prestandavinster hos testprogramvaran kunde dokumenteras vid anvÀndning av samtliga verktyg. Det verktyg som var mest heltÀckande gÀllande dess funktionalitet var Traceview, ett profileringsverktyg som kunde anvÀndas för att analysera CPU-prestanda, layout-prestanda och svarstids-prestanda. För att utföra en heltÀckande prestandaoptimering krÀvdes dock kompletterande verktyg för optimeringsomrÄdet minnes-prestanda. Genom arbetet och den resulterade rekommendationen kan utvecklare av Android-applikationer förbÀttra sina arbetsmetoder vid prestandaoptimering, genom att anvÀnda sig av lÀmpliga och effektiva verktyg

    International Criminal Law: Over-studied and Underachieving?

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    n his recent review of Neil Boister's book, An Introduction to Transnational Criminal Law, Robert Currie praises the author for shedding light on a field of law that has suffered from inattention. Transnational criminal law (TCL), the ‘other’ branch of what was traditionally called international criminal law, has been overshadowed by international criminal law ‘proper’ (ICL). The establishment of international criminal tribunals after the end of the Cold War, culminating in the establishment of the ‘flagship’ court, the International Criminal Court (ICC), came with a spectacular rise of ICL as a separate legal discipline. As a result, ICL stole the limelight at the expense of TCL. Currie deplores this since TCL presents features and issues that are worthy and in pressing need of in-depth study. Also, in his view the attention to ICL is unjustified: ICL ‘as an academic and legal inquiry or study has become distended by over-study’. While he supports the mission of international criminal justice in general, Currie points out that ICL as an academic discipline is saturated; each article, paragraph and subparagraph of the ICC Statute has been pulled apart and dissected

    International Crimes before Dutch Courts: Recent Development

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    In the early 1990s, two former members of the Afghan secret service applied for a residence permit in the Netherlands. Their request was denied on the basis of the exclusion clause of Article 1F(a) of the Vienna Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees. There were serious reasons for suspecting that the men had committed war crimes during the Afghan civil war of 1979–92. In 2000, the immigration authorities transmitted the files of the two men to the public prosecution office, which initiated prosecutions in 2003. At the trial, defence counsel raised various preliminary challenges. They argued that the case should be declared inadmissible since relying on the immigration files would violate the nemo tenetur principle and the right against self-incrimination enshrined in Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Furthermore, the court had no universal jurisdiction over violations of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions since there was no international rule mandating a right to universal jurisdiction over war crimes committed in non-international armed conflicts. The Hague District Court dismissed the defence challenges and eventually convicted the Afghan nationals to 9 and 12 years' imprisonment. The Hague Appeal Court endorsed most of the findings of the District Court and confirmed the convictions and sentences. The reasoning underlying the decisions, both at first instance and at appeal, raise questions particularly with regard to universal jurisdiction. In this article the defence arguments are explored and the reasoning of the courts is analysed. © 2007, Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law. All rights reserved

    Joint Criminal Confusion: Exploring the merits and demerits of joint enterprise liability

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    In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessorial liability when it handed down its decision in R v Jogee. The Court abolished the head of liability known as 'joint criminal enterprise' (JCE) and replaced it with the ordinary principles of aiding and abetting, which it re-stated for this purpose. JCE features prominently in international criminal law (ICL) where it has an equally contentious status. The full implications of Jogee remain at present uncertain, underexplored and divisive. In this chapter, I evaluate the merits and demerits of joint enterprise by comparing JCE in English law and ICL. A cross-jurisdictional analysis of joint enterprise reveals more deeply the role the notion plays in the overall taxonomy of criminal responsibility. There are different concepts of joint enterprise with different theoretical groundings. By not recognising this, past debates of joint enterprise liability have failed to appreciate the concept’s merits alongside complicity liability

    Pluralism in International Criminal Law

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    Fragmentation of international law is a phenomenon that has been discussed ever since the ILC in 2000 decided to add to its programme of work the topic ‘Risks ensuing from the fragmentation of international law’. Koskenniemi, in a paper published in this journal, was one of the first to address fragmentation in legal literature. In 2006, he finalized a voluminous report on ‘Fragmentation of International Law’, providing for means and ways to cope with fragmentation.</jats:p

    Command Responsibility at the ICTY: Three Generations of Case Law and Still Ambiguity

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    European Arrest Warrant: Extradition in Transition

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