1. Introduction: the warlord in the forecourt; 2. Court between two poles: conceptualising 'complementarity' and 'distance'; 3. Who pulls the strings? The ICC's relations with states; 4. In whose name? The ICC's relations with affected communities; 5. When courts collide: the ICC and domestic prosecutions; 6. Peace versus justice Redux: the ICC, amnesties and peace negotiations; 7. The ICC and community-based responses to atrocity; 8. Continental patterns: assessing the ICC's impact in the remaining African situations; 9. Conclusion: narrowing the distance.
Following the controversy stirred by the International Criminal Court (ICC) in Africa, Clark analyses its multi-level impact on national politics and ordinary communities.
Phil Clark is a Reader in Comparative and International Politics at School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He specialises in conflict and post-conflict issues in Africa, including transitional justice, peacebuilding and reconciliation. He is also a senior research fellow at the School of Leadership at the University of Johannesburg. Previously, Dr Clark was the co-founder and convenor of Oxford Transitional Justice Research and established the Research, Policy and Higher Education programme at the Aegis Trust Rwanda. His articles have featured in the Guardian, The New York Times, the BBC and CNN websites, Foreign Affairs, Times Higher Education Supplement, Prospect, Dissent, The East African, the Australian and the Huffington Post. His last book was The Gacaca Courts, Post-Genocide Justice and Reconciliation in Rwanda: Justice without Lawyers (Cambridge, 2010). He holds a doctorate in Politics from the University of Oxford, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar.
'Many people talk about the effects of the International Criminal
Court in Africa, but Phil Clark is easily the most learned and
therefore qualified to do so. His careful and lucid investigation
of how justice from afar has transformed local politics is a
thrilling achievement.' Samuel Moyn, Yale University,
Connecticut
'Meticulously researched and engagingly written, Distant Justice is
a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the vexed relationship
between the International Criminal Court and African governments.
Phil Clark mounts a compelling critique of the ICC's complicated
entanglements in Africa and advises caution regarding what
international legal responses to mass atrocities can usefully
accomplish.' Richard Ashby Wilson, author of Incitement on Trial:
Prosecuting International Speech Crimes
'Phil Clark has written the definitive book on Africa and the
International Criminal Court. Distant Justice has it all -
extensive research, vivid interviews, creative insights, gentle
lessons, and an upbeat cadence. With laser-sharp focus, Clark
exposes the limits of international law. And with energetic
optimism, he shows how law can do better.' Mark A. Drumbl,
Washington and Lee University, Virginia
'This book took 11 years in the writing and it was worth the wait.
Phil Clark confirms his reputation as amongst the best Africanist
scholars writing on transitional justice. Distant Justice is
empirically grounded - the lived experiences of over 650
interviewees shine through. It is also theoretically rich and
beautifully written. If you want to understand the relationship
between justice, politics and international relations in Africa,
read it. It's a tour de force.' Kieran McEvoy, Queen's University
Belfast
'In Distant Justice, Phil Clark has written an epochal work on the
ICC. He allows the facts and the evidence to speak without
political varnish. Clark appropriately indicts the ICC for
being an imperial project that's tone deaf about its deficits.
However, he pleads for deep reforms and correctly rejects the
arguments to throw the baby out with the bathwater.' Makau Mutua,
State University of New York
'Few international institutions - not even that old bête noir, the
International Monetary Fund - have drawn as much political ire in
Africa as the ICC. Needless to say, the reasons are varied and
intricate. By focusing on the issue of 'distance' Phil Clark's
far-reaching examination of the ICC in Africa offers new and
interesting perspectives on why the relationship is so conflicted
and dysfunctional. It also critically re-engages with the
phenomenon of 'justice' as (mis)understood across borders and
cultures. Distant Justice is a highly-nuanced, deeply researched
and wide-ranging exploration of the intersection between
international institutions, domestic (and regional) politics and
on-the-ground perspectives of ordinary individuals about a
phenomenon of such critical relevance to contemporary society.' J.
Oloka-Onyango, author of When Courts do Politics
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