Fr. 135.00

Impediments to Exercising Jurisdiction over International Crimes

English · Hardback

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Description

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The assumption is growing that legal impediments to the exercise of jurisdiction are invalid in the face of the imperative to prosecute international crimes. This analysis of seven principal impediments comparatively analyses each from the perspective of their historical origins, the policy contexts justifying them and the legal arguments used by courts and commentators to either uphold the barrier to prosecution or to reject its application so that prosecution remains unhindered. The seven impediments are: (1) Amnesties, (2) Pardons, (3) Statutes of Limitation, (4) Abuse of Process, (5) Immunities, (6) Ne bis in idem (double jeopardy), and (7) Male captus bene detentus (wrongly captured, properly detained). Each chapter contains a theoretical evaluation of each impediment, as well as a discussion of relevant case-law from world-wide domestic and international jurisdictions.

List of contents

Exercising Jurisdiction over International Crimes.- Impediments.- Amnesties.- Pardons.- Statutes of Limitation.- Immunities.- The Principle of Ne Bis in Idem.- Abuse of Process.- General Conclusion.- General Conclusion.

About the author

Yasmin Q. Naqvi is an international lawyer with the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY.

Summary

This book challenges the growing assumptions about the exercise of jurisdiction over international crimes – that legal impediments are invalid in the face of the imperative to prosecute crimes of this gravity. Six principal impediments to the exercise of jurisdiction over international crimes are individually and comparatively analysed from the perspective of their historical origins, the policy contexts justifying them, and the legal arguments used by courts and commentators to either uphold the barrier to prosecution or to reject its application so that prosecution remains unhindered. These six impediments are: (1) Amnesties; (2) Pardons; Statutes of Limitation; (4) Immunities; (5) Ne bis in Idem (double jeopardy); and (6) Abuse of process.
The author proposes that an approach based upon an ‘interests analysis’, derived from policy oriented approaches to international law, provides a reasonable, coherent, and transparent means for courts to resolve the question of jurisdiction when faced with competing rules or principles such as those forming the basis of the research. Each chapter contains a theoretical evaluation of one of the mentioned impediments, as well as a comprehensive and up to date discussion of relevant case-law from both world-wide domestic and international jurisdictions.
This volume builds upon Yasmin Naqvi’s expertise as a scholar and a lawyer working for the Chambers of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. She has also held positions at the International Committee of the Red Cross, the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva, and as a legal consultant on transitional justice and special procedures at the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Product details

Authors Yasmin Q Naqvi, Yasmin Q. Naqvi
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 25.10.2010
 
EAN 9789067043205
ISBN 978-90-6704-320-5
No. of pages 400
Dimensions 166 mm x 29 mm x 247 mm
Illustrations 400 p.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Law > Civil law, civil procedural law

Mediation, B, International Criminal Law, Law and Criminology, conflict management, Dispute resolution (Law), Dispute Resolution, Mediation, Arbitration, Arbitration, mediation & alternative dispute resolution

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