Fr. 70.00

The International Criminal Court and the End of Impunity in Kenya

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

The period immediately following Kenya's 2007 presidential election left a shocking trail of atrocities, with over 1,000 people dead and countless thousands left victimised and displaced. In response, the International Criminal Court began a series of investigations and trials, promising no impunity for even the highest ranking perpetrators. When the country's president and vice-president were implicated in the crimes, the case took on worldwide significance.
The International Criminal Court and the End of Impunity in Kenya is a five-year study addressing critical human rights issues with a global reach and is the first detailed account of the ICC's intervention in Kenya. It probes the relationship between the ICC and state institutions, known as positive complementarity, and asks whether the ICC's intervention led to an end to impunity. The author provides comprehensive analysis of the Waki Commission's sealed envelope, the government's attempts to establish a special tribunal and the trials in The Hague. He also provides in depth consideration of any influence the ICC's intervention may have had on the passing of a new constitution, the establishment of a truth commission and important reforms to the judiciary, police and witness protection programme.
Documenting the effects of these interventions on the Kenyan people, and on the country's legal and judicial systems, the book provides vital lessons in global justice as it:
-Details the ICC's involvement in Kenya in the aftermath of extreme violence and instability
-Evaluates the ICC prosecutor's strategy of positive complementarity
-Identifies optimal conditions for positive complementarity to be effective
-Links cultures of impunity to state-sponsored corruption
-Explores the possible impact of the ICC on national and global policy
-Discusses implications in responding to future crimes against humanity
Replete with officialgovernment sources, The International Criminal Court and the End of Impunity in Kenya is necessary reading for researchers and practitioners working in public international law, particularly those specialising in conflict and post-conflict states.

List of contents

Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The Strategy of Positive Complementarity.- Chapter 3: Kenya's Post-Election Violence and History of Impunity.- Chapter 4: From Nairobi to The Hague.- Chapter 5: Prosecuting Perpetrators.- Chapter 6: Don't be Vague, Go to The Hague!.- Chapter 7: Rule of Law Reforms: Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc?.- Chapter 8: Culture of Impunity.- Chapter 9: Conclusion.

About the author

Dr Lionel Nichols is a barrister of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple and an Adjunct Lecturer in Law at the University of Tasmania. He specialises in international criminal law, human rights law, crime and transitional justice. He has previously worked on the trials of Radovan Karadzic at the ICTY and Charles Taylor at the SCSL. He is the former convenor of the Oxford Transitional Justice Research group and was the University of Oxford's Global Justice Research Fellow.

Summary

The period immediately following Kenya's 2007 presidential election left a shocking trail of atrocities, with over 1,000 people dead and countless thousands left victimised and displaced. In response, the International Criminal Court began a series of investigations and trials, promising no impunity for even the highest ranking perpetrators. When the country's president and vice-president were implicated in the crimes, the case took on worldwide significance.
The International Criminal Court and the End of Impunity in Kenya is a five-year study addressing critical human rights issues with a global reach and is the first detailed account of the ICC's intervention in Kenya. It probes the relationship between the ICC and state institutions, known as positive complementarity, and asks whether the ICC's intervention led to an end to impunity. The author provides comprehensive analysis of the Waki Commission's sealed envelope, the government's attempts to establish a special tribunal and the trials in The Hague. He also provides in depth consideration of any influence the ICC's intervention may have had on the passing of a new constitution, the establishment of a truth commission and important reforms to the judiciary, police and witness protection programme.
Documenting the effects of these interventions on the Kenyan people, and on the country's legal and judicial systems, the book provides vital lessons in global justice as it:
•Details the ICC's involvement in Kenya in the aftermath of extreme violence and instability
•Evaluates the ICC prosecutor's strategy of positive complementarity
•Identifies optimal conditions for positive complementarity to be effective
•Links cultures of impunity to state-sponsored corruption
•Explores the possible impact of the ICC on national and global policy
•Discusses implications in responding to future crimes against humanity
Replete with officialgovernment sources, The International Criminal Court and the End of Impunity in Kenya is necessary reading for researchers and practitioners working in public international law, particularly those specialising in conflict and post-conflict states.

Product details

Authors Lionel Nichols
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2016
 
EAN 9783319375557
ISBN 978-3-31-937555-7
No. of pages 267
Dimensions 155 mm x 13 mm x 235 mm
Weight 487 g
Illustrations XV, 267 p. 6 illus. in color.
Series Springer Series in Transitional Justice
Springer Series in Transitional Justice
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science

Internationale Beziehungen, B, Political Science, International Relations, Political Science and International Studies, Tribunal justice, Transitional Justice in Kenya

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.