Fr. 236.00

International Practices of Criminal Justice - Social and Legal Perspectives

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Mikkel Jarle Christensen is Associate Professor at the Danish National Research Foundation’s Centre of Excellence for International Courts (iCourts), Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. Ron Levi is the George Ignatieff Chair of Peace and Conflict Studies, Deputy Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs, and Associate Professor of Global Affairs and Sociology at the University of Toronto. He is also cross-appointed in the Faculty of Law, the Departments of Political Science, and the Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies. Klappentext This book examines the social dynamics behind the creation of internationalized criminal law. Although the emergence of different forms of international criminal law in the 1990s has been the topic of much attention, this book takes the people and practices behind the modern phenomenon of internationalized criminal law as its point of departure. Zusammenfassung This book examines the social dynamics behind the creation of internationalized criminal law. Although the emergence of different forms of international criminal law in the 1990s has been the topic of much attention, this book takes the people and practices behind the modern phenomenon of internationalized criminal law as its point of departure. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: An internationalized criminal justice: paths of law and paths of police Mikkel Jarle Christensen and Ron Levi Part I 1. Reunited Europe and the internationalization of criminal law: the creation and circulation of criminal law as an international governance tool MIKKEL JARLE CHRISTENSEN 2.Displacing and replacing the criminal law within the European space ANTOINE MÉGIE 3. The transformation of legal ideas: the globalization and politicization of transitional justice in the Middle East JAMIE ROWEN 4. The global governance of transnational crime: implications for justice and the rule of law VALSAMIS MITSILEGAS Part II 5. Prosecutorial strategies and opening statements: justifying international prosecutions from the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg through to the International Criminal Court RON LEVI, SARA DEZALAY AND MICHAEL AMIRASLANI 6. Red Notices and transnational police practices NICOLA LANGILLE AND FRÉDÉRIC MÉGRET 7. Trading on guilt: the judicial logic of plea bargains at the ICTY and its transplant to Serbia and Bosnia KERSTIN BREE CARLSON 8. The making of international criminal justice: towards a sociology of the ‘legal field’ KIRSTEN CAMPBELL 9. Extracurricular international criminal law MARK A. DRUMBL Part III 10. Criminal investigation and prosecution by a European public prosecutor’s office in the EU: shared enforcement without procedural safeguards and judicial protection? MICHIEL LUCHTMAN AND JOHN VERVAELE 11. Virtual trials revisited: the shifting politics of state cooperation from the UN ad hoc tribunals to the International Criminal Court VICTOR PESKIN 12. Rwanda’s Kabgayi Trial between international justice and national reconciliation SIGALL HOROVITZ 13. As the pendulum swings – the revival of the hybrid tribunal MARK KERSTEN Index ...

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