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Top Posts & Pages
- The ICC, Trump, and Venezuela: A collision course and Catch-22 over who prosecutes Nicolás Maduro?
- To Prosecute or Not to Prosecute: Maduro’s Indictment, Head-of-State Immunity, and the United States’ Instrumentalisation of Non-Recognition
- Violating international law to get rid of dictators is alluring but wrong - and dangerous
- A Reckless Crime Against Humanity: Justice for the Victims of the Beirut Blasts
- An alleged ISIS war criminal has been arrested in Canada. How did he get in, and why won't Canada prosecute his alleged atrocities?
- Algorithms, Automation and Accountability: Imagining Responsibility for the Crimes of Machines
- After the Trial Ends: Why Residual Mechanisms Deserve Our Attention
- Courts in Conversation: The International Criminal Court, the International Court of Justice and their mutual and respective roles in Addressing International Crimes
- Canada helped build the ICC. Now its silence is helping destroy it.
- An Important Past: Since Hitler, Heads of State have No Immunity
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Category Archives: Human Rights
The Crime of Aggression: Why (Not) Care?
As promised, here is my response to last week’s post on the crime of aggression. I had intended to have it ready earlier, but the dramatic events of last week (see here, here and here) have kept me occupied. I … Continue reading
Saif Gaddafi Arrested: What now for Justice in Libya?
Last Friday night, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, dressed in the traditional garbs of the Tuaregs, was detained whilst on the run, likely to neighbouring Niger. With the death of his father, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam had become the most wanted … Continue reading
Dancing with the Devil – Dealing With Gaddafi
Sometimes there are articles that simply get under my skin and that create a pesky need to address them individually. John Deverell’s op-ed in The Guardian, There’s no shame in talking to pe0ple like Gaddafi, was one of those pieces. … Continue reading
Posted in Arms Deals, Human Rights, Justice, Libya, United Kingdom
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Gaddafi’s Death: What now? What Justice?
When Col Muammar Gaddafi said earlier this year that he would “fight to the death” in the face of the revolution taking place in Libya, he wasn’t joking around. Flashing across the screens of virtually every news program today have … Continue reading
Revisiting the Peace-Justice Debate in northern Uganda
Perhaps no nation has witnessed so impassioned a debate on the relationship between peace and international criminal justice as Uganda. Northern Uganda, a case many believed the Court could “cut its teeth” on, sparked a fierce discussion, popularly referred to … Continue reading
South Asia’s First War Crimes Criminal Tribunal
JiC is happy to welcome Dawood Ahmed as a guest-poster. Dawood is a Solicitor (non-practicing) and a research associate at the Center on Law and Globalization. In his first post at JiC, Dawood introduces some of the key challenges facing … Continue reading
Posted in Amnesty, Asia, Bangladesh, Human Rights, Justice, War crimes
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Justice and Diamonds in Zimbabwe: Saving Kimberley from Itself
Andrew Jillions joins us again to discuss the Kimberly Process of diamond certification in the context Zimbabwe. As Andrew explains, the case of Zimbabwe risks undermining a process which, for all its faults, remains the best way to prevent the … Continue reading
Posted in Economics of Conflict, Human Rights, Justice, Kimberly Process, Zimbabwe
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No Surprise: Why Libya but not Syria
Despite high rhetoric being flung across the Security Council yesterday, Russia and China’s vetoing of the European-drafted resolution condemning Syria’s brutal crackdown on civilians should come as no surprise. There are a number of political-tuned reasons to explain why this Resolution failed. … Continue reading
Broadening Horizons: Ecocide, Famine and the “Other” Crimes
If you can’t see it, it can’t and doesn’t really matter that much. That seems to be the attitude of many of us to key issues of international concern. Take for example, a core contradiction in many people’s hesitation to … Continue reading
Self-Referrals and Lack of Transparency at the ICC – The Case of Northern Uganda
Nobody could know for certain how the International Criminal Court would work in practice when the Rome Statute was adopted in 1998. The first surprise was the speed at which the Statute was ratified by the 60 states necessary for … Continue reading
Posted in Human Rights, ICC Prosecutor, International Criminal Court (ICC), Justice, Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), Uganda
Tagged ICC, LRA, Transparency, Uganda
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