Fr. 146.00

De Facto International Prosecutors in a Global Era - With My Own Eyes

English · Hardback

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Description

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In the past decades, great strides have been made to ensure that crimes against humanity and state-sponsored organized violence are not committed with impunity. Alongside states, large international organizations such as the United Nations and forums such as the International Criminal Court, 'de facto international prosecutors' have emerged to address these crimes. Acting as investigators and evidence-gathers to identify individuals and officials engaged in serious human rights violations, these 'private' non-state actors, and state legal 'officials' in a foreign court, pursue criminal accountability for those most responsible for core international crimes. They do so when local options to investigate fail and an international criminal tribunal remains unavailable. This study outlines three case studies of witnesses and victims who pursue those most responsible, including former heads of state. It examines their practices and strategies, and shows how witnesses and victims of core crimes emerge as key leaders in the accountability process.

List of contents










Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part I. Framework I: Conceptualising De facto international prosecutors in a Global Era: 1. Extending the reach of international criminal law (ICL); Part II. Three biographical case studies: De facto international prosecutors in practice: 2. De facto international prosecutors and prosecuting Pinochet (Chile); 3. De facto international prosecutors and a verdict for Habré (Chad); 4. De facto international prosecutors and the CIJA (Syria); 5. A legal obligation to prosecute: from de facto to de jure international prosecutors? (Germany/Syria); Part III. Framework II: How De facto international prosecutors conceptualise international criminal law: 6. A basic law for international criminal law?; Conclusion; References; Index.

About the author

Melinda Rankin is Honorary Research Fellow at School of Political Science and International Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia. Prior to this, she was Postdoctoral Research Fellow at The University of Queensland, a Visiting Research Fellow at the Centre for Global Constitutionalism at WZB Berlin and a Lecturer at The University of Sydney. She is the author of The Political Life of Mary Kaldor: Ideas and Action in International Relations (2017).

Summary

Explains how and why 'de facto international prosecutors' extend the reaches of international criminal law by implicitly or explicitly adopting the tasks and practices of the offices of international prosecutors.

Additional text

'A timely book, enhancing our understanding of how the international criminal justice process can sometimes overcome considerable structural barriers in a global society. Not only conceptually innovative, but gripping and eye-opening in its case studies.' Professor Mattias Kumm, Inge Rennert Professor of Law at New York University Law School, and Professor of Global Public Law at Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB)

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