Preface; List of abbreviations; Introduction; 1. International crimes; 2. Individual and collective responsibility; 3. The global institutional architecture; 4. International criminal justice procedures; 5. Remedying wrong; 6. Beyond the status quo: re-thinking international criminal law; Index.
Presents theories, practices and critiques alongside each other to engage students, scholars and professionals from multiple fields. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Carsten Stahn is a Professor of International Criminal Law and Global Justice at the Leiden Law School, Universiteit Leiden, and is Former Legal Officer at the International Criminal Court. He is project leader of NWO grants on jus post bellum and post-conflict justice, winner of the Ciardi Prize of the International Society for Military Law and the Law of War for work on International Territorial Administration (2008). Professor Stahn is editor of the Leiden Journal of International Law and correspondent of the Netherlands International Law Review. He has taught International Criminal Law in Geneva and Galway, and has published eleven books and over seventy articles/essays in different fields of international law and international justice.
'This book comes as a gift from heaven for those interested in and
concerned about international criminal justice at this critical
juncture in time.' Christine Van den Wyngaert, Judge at the
Specialist Chambers for Kosovo and formerly judge at the
International Court of Justice, International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia and the International Criminal Court
'Thoughtful, provocative, authoritative, insightful and impeccably
referenced, Carsten Stahn's rich study speaks to a broad spectrum
of issues in international criminal justice. This is an invaluable
source to which practitioners, scholars, students and judges will
turn again and again.' William Schabas, Middlesex University,
London
'This book is monumental in its scope, breathtaking in its depth,
stunning in its rigour, and insightful in its tone. Carsten Stahn
says it all, and says it all so well.' Mark A. Drumbl, Class of
1975 Alumni Professor of Law and Director, Transnational Law
Institute, Washington and Lee University, Virginia
'Neither excessively pessimistic nor hagiographic, Carsten Stahn's
book paints a realistic portrait of international criminal law's
peril and promise. Its chapters weave effortlessly back and forth
between conceptual analysis, doctrinal developments, and
international context. Rarely has a book so comprehensively
catalogued the bright future of the discipline while also remaining
levelheaded about its challenges. Theoreticians and practitioners
alike will be delighted, as I am, by Stahn's spirited excavation of
the irresolvable tensions of the field.' Jens David Ohlin, Vice
Dean and Professor of Law, Cornell Law School, New York
'Carsten Stahn has written a remarkably insightful masterpiece
probing the depths of international criminal law, which has
desperately needed the clarity of argument found in this book.
Soaring above a very congested field of scholarship, Stahn presents
a pragmatic, worldly, and historically penetrating view of the
multitude of issues in the realm of international criminal law. The
word that kept coming to me as I read his book is, 'enlightening'.
Professionals, students, and academics will only profit by reading
its gems of logic and legal scrutiny.' David Scheffer, Northwestern
University, Illinois and US Ambassador at Large for War Crimes
Issues (1997–2001)
'This is a refreshing return to clear and useful logic … This is a
direct textbook that treats every word and paragraph as essential
to convey a point. While few patrons might face problems with the
international courts, many might be interested in developments in
the news that touch on these subject, and might search for a book
like this to explain what is going on in these foreign judicial
systems.' Pennsylvania Literary Journal
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