Mehr lesen
Critically explores the International Criminal Court's evolution and the domestic effects of its interventions in three African countries.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. Introduction; Part I. The ICC and Complementarity: Evolutions, Interpretations, Implementation: 2. Tracing an idea, constructing a norm: complementarity as a catalyst; 3. Mirror images? Complementarity in the courtroom; 4. Leveraging the Hague: complementarity and the Office of the Prosecutor; Part II. The ICC in Uganda, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of Congo: 5. Compliance and performance: implementation as domestic politics; 6. Competing, complementing, copying: domestic courts and complementarity; 7. Catalysing opportunity: complementarity and domestic proceedings; 8. Conclusions and recommendations.
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Christian M. De Vos is a senior advocacy officer with the Open Society Justice Initiative. He has worked as a human rights advocate, attorney, and researcher for organizations including Amnesty International, the United States Institute of Peace, the War Crimes Research Office, and Leiden University's Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies. He previously clerked for the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He has published in a number of leading academic journals and was a coeditor of the volume Contested Justice: The Politics and Practice of International Criminal Court Interventions (with Sara Kendall and Carsten Stahn, 2015). A graduate of American University, Washington College of Law (J.D.) and Leiden University (Ph.D.), De Vos is a member of the New York Bar and was a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Zusammenfassung
An innovative, inter-disciplinary examination of how the International Criminal Court came to be framed as a 'catalyst' for domestic accountability, and its unexpected effects in Uganda, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The book urges a critical rethinking of the ICC's politics and offers concrete recommendations for future practice.
Zusatztext
'Christian De Vos brings fresh insights to the raging debates around the International Criminal Court in Africa. His rigorous analysis of the ICC's operations in Uganda, the DRC and Kenya uncovers rich and surprising findings across these cases, showing how widely the Court's effects have varied depending on the domestic context. As the ICC enters its third decade of operation, his conclusion that the ICC's practice of complementarity has catalysed African civil society much more than national judiciaries - the Court's intended audience - demands urgent consideration.' Phil Clark, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London