-
Join 32,847 other subscribers
JiC on FB!
To keep the site going, please consider donating.
Follow Justice in Conflict on Twitter!
Tweets by MarkKerstenBlogroll
- A Contario
- Aidnography
- Communis Hostis Omnium
- Diane Marie Amann
- EJIL: Talk!
- Global Memo
- Global Transitional Justice
- Harry M. Rhea's International Criminal Justice Blog
- IFAIR
- International Justice – RNW
- International Justice Central
- IntLawGrrls
- Law and Security Strategy
- Lawyers for Justice in Libya
- LieberCode
- Making Sense of Sudan
- Notts Law PhD
- Open Society Justice Initiative
- Opinio Juris
- Peter Quayle
- PhD Studies in Human Rights
- Re-Thinking International Criminal Justice in Africa
- Rob Crilly
- Securing Rights
- Spreading the Jam
- Texas in Africa
- The American Exception
- The Disorder of Things
- The Duck of Minerva
- The International Jurist
- The Lex Specialis
- The Multilateralist
- The Rights' Future
- Turtle Bay
- UN Dispatch
- War and Law
- Wired Danger Room
- Wronging Rights
Top Posts & Pages
- End of the Road: Prosecuting Fulgence Kayishema for Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda
- Straight to the top: The International Criminal Court issues an arrest warrant for Russia's Vladimir Putin
- Where the Roads Meet: The Relationship between International Criminal Law and International Environmental Law
- Calling COVID-19 vaccine mandates a ‘crime against humanity’ isn’t just wrong, it’s dangerous
- Did the Torture Report Just Open the U.S. Up to ICC Prosecution?
- After all this time, why has Ukraine not ratified the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court?
- Contact
- About the Authors
- The Forgotten Victim of War: The Natural Environment in Ukraine
- Big Fish or Little Fish — Who Should the International Criminal Court Target?
Blog Stats
- 2,045,548 hits
Categories
- "Peace versus Justice" Debate
- #MeToo
- Academic Articles / Books
- Activism
- Ad hoc tribunals
- Admissibility
- Advocacy
- Afghanistan
- Africa
- Africa Group for Justice and Accountability (AGJA)
- Africa-ICC Expert Panel
- African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights
- African Union (AU)
- Ahmad Al Mahdi Al Faqi (Abou Tourab)
- Al Hassan Ag Abdoul Aziz Ag Mohamed Ag Mahmoud
- al-Shabaab
- Al-Tuhamy Mohamed Khaled
- Amnesty
- Apartheid
- Apologies
- Arab League
- Arab Spring
- Archives
- Argentina
- Armenia
- Arms Deals
- Arms Trade
- Article 16
- Article 98
- Asia
- Assembly of States Parties
- Asset Recovery
- Asylum-Seekers
- Australia
- Bahrain
- Balkans
- Bangladesh
- Belgium
- Bilateral Immunity Agreements
- Black Lives Matter
- Boko Haram
- Books and Publications
- Bosco Ntaganda
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Burkina Faso
- Burma/Myanmar
- Burundi
- Cambodia
- Canada
- Canadian Partnership of International Justice
- Central African Republic (CAR)
- Chad
- Chagos Islands
- Chambres Africaines Extraordinaires (CAE)
- Child Soldiers
- Children
- Chile
- China
- Climate Change
- Colombia
- Commission for International Justice and Accountability (CIJA)
- Commission of Inquiry
- Complementarity
- Conferences
- Conflict Resolution
- Coups
- Crime of Aggression
- Crimes against humanity
- Croatia
- Cultural Crimes
- Czech Republic
- Darfur
- Defendants
- Defense Counsel
- Deferral
- Democratic Republic of Congo
- Deportation
- Deputy Prosecutor
- Deterrence
- Development
- Diplomatic Assurances
- Djibouti
- Dominic Ongwen ICC
- Donald Trump
- Donetsk
- Drones
- Ecocide
- Economic Community of West Africa (ECOWAS)
- Economics of Conflict
- Egypt
- Elections
- Enforced Disappearance
- Environment
- Eritrea
- Ethnic Cleansing
- Europe
- European Court of Human Rights
- European Union (EU)
- Events
- Exile
- Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC)
- Extraordinary Rendition
- Famine
- FARC
- Fatou Bensouda
- FIFA
- Film
- France
- Funding
- Gabon
- Gambia
- Gaza
- Gender
- Genocide
- Georgia
- Germain Katanga
- Germany
- Ghana
- Gravity
- Gregory Kersten
- Guantanamo Bay
- Guatemala
- Guest Posts
- Guinea Bissau
- Hissène Habré
- Historical Justice
- Holocaust
- Holodomor
- Honduras
- Human Rights
- Human Trafficking
- Humanitarian Intervention
- Humour
- Hybrid Court for South Sudan
- Hybrid Courts
- Hybrid Justice Symposium
- Hybrid Tribunals
- ICC President
- ICC Prosecutor
- ICC Registry
- ICTY
- IDP
- Immigration
- Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM)
- Indigenous Peoples
- International and Organized Crimes Division of Kenya
- International Court of Justice
- International Court of Justice (ICJ)
- International Crimes Division (Uganda)
- International Criminal Court (ICC)
- International Criminal Justice
- International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
- International Humanitarian Law
- International Justice Ambassador
- International Justice Day
- International Law
- Interview
- Interviews
- Investigations
- Iran
- Iraq
- ISIS
- Islamic State
- Israel
- Italy
- Ivory Coast / Côte d'Ivoire
- Ivory Coast and the ICC
- Jean-Pierre Bemba
- JiC News
- Jordan (not Michael)
- Journalism
- Judges
- Justice
- Justice in Conflict
- Kenya
- Kenya and the ICC
- Kimberly Process
- Kosovo
- Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)
- Kosovo Relocated Specialist Judicial Institution (KRSJI)
- Kosovo Specialist Chambers
- Kurdistan
- Kuwait
- Kwoyelo Trial
- Latin America
- Laurent Gbagbo
- Lawfare
- Lebanon
- Legacy
- Liberal Peace
- Liberia
- Libya
- Libya and International Justice Symposium
- Libya and the ICC
- Libyan National Army
- Lord's Resistance Army (LRA)
- Lugansk
- Luis Moreno-Ocampo
- Lustration
- Mahmoud al-Werfalli
- Malawi
- Malaysia
- Mali
- Mass Atrocity Monday
- Mauritania
- Memorialization
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Migration
- Missing Persons
- Money Laundering
- Mozambique
- Myanmar
- Namibia
- NATO
- Nauru
- Nepal
- Next ICC Prosecutor
- Next Prosecutor Symposium
- Niger
- Nigeria
- North Korea
- Northern Ireland
- northern Uganda
- Norway
- Nuremberg
- Nuremberg Trials
- Ocampo Six
- Office of the Prosecutor
- Omar al-Bashir
- Osama bin Laden
- Osama bin Laden and international law
- Outreach
- Pakistan
- Palestine
- Palestine and ICC Symposium
- Palestine and R2P Symposium
- Palestine and the ICC
- Paraguay
- Peace and Justice in Colombia Symposium
- Peace Negotiations
- Peace Processes
- Peacebuilding
- Peru
- Poland
- Policy Papers
- Politics of Memory
- Preliminary Examinations
- Prisoners of War
- Qatar
- Raila Odinga
- Ratko Mladic
- Refugees
- Reparations
- Residential Schools
- Responsibiltiy to Protect (R2P)
- Restorative Justice
- Rethinking Peace and Justice Symposium
- Rohingya
- Rome Statute
- Rome Statute ratifications
- Russia
- Rwanda
- Rwandan Genocide
- Sanctions
- Saudi Arabia
- Senegal
- Sentencing
- Serbia
- Sexual and Gender Based Violence
- Sexual Violence
- Sierra Leone
- Simone Gbagbo
- Slobodan Milosevic
- Social and Economic Rights
- Social Media
- Somalia
- South Africa
- South America
- South Ossetia
- South Sudan
- Southern Sudan
- Soviet Union
- Spain
- Special African Chamber (CAE)
- Special Court for Sierra Leone
- Special Court for SIerra Leone (SCSL)
- Special Criminal Court
- Special Jurisdiction for Peace
- Special Tribunal for Lebanon
- Sport
- Sri Lanka
- Starvation
- Sudan
- Symposium
- Syria
- Taliban
- Tanzania
- Teaching Tools
- Terrorism
- The Gambia
- The ICC’s Impact on National Justice Symposium
- The Life and Trials of Dominic Ongwen: A JiC Symposium
- The Netherlands
- The Tripoli Three (Tripoli3)
- Thomas Dyilo Lubanga
- Thomas Lubanga
- Torture
- Traditional Justice Mechanisms
- Transitional Justice
- Transnational Criminal Law
- Transnational Organized Crime
- Trials in Absentia
- Trust Fund for Victims
- Truth and Reconciliation Commissions
- Truth Commission
- Tunisia
- Turkey
- Uganda
- Uhuru Kenyatta
- Ukraine
- UN Commission of Inquiry on Sri Lanka
- UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria
- UN General Assembly
- UN Security Council
- Uncategorized
- United Kingdom
- United Nations
- United States
- Universal Jurisdiction
- Universal Periodic Review (UPR)
- Uzbekistan
- Vatican
- Venezuela
- Victim Participation
- Vladimir Putin
- War crimes
- Wayamo Foundation
- William Ruto
- Witnesses
- Yahya Jammeh
- Yazidi Genocide
- Yemen
- Zimbabwe
Category Archives: The Tripoli Three (Tripoli3)
An Arab Fling: The West and International Justice in Libya
The following piece is a guest-post at Opinio Juris where I have been honoured with the opportunity to guest-blog for the next two weeks. All pieces will also be cross-posted here. Enjoy! An Arab Fling: The West and International Justice … Continue reading
If Caught, Libya likely won’t Extradite Gaddafi
In a recent comment, a reader of JiC sent me a link to a Guardian post entitled: Libya may refuse to extradite Yvonne Fletcher murder suspect. Some of the statements made in the piece by Libyan rebel officials may have major … Continue reading
A Cunning Move: Justice in Libya or The Hague?
Numerous commentators have given their two cents on whether the Tripoli Three – Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam and his intelligence chief, Abdullah al-Senussi – should be tried in The Hague or in Libya. Predictably, most continue to argue that it … Continue reading
Gaddafi to Burkina Faso? Probably Not: Lessons from Charles Taylor
In the wake of pro-Gaddafi convoys speeding through the Sahara, apparently with cash and gold aboard, there has been a lot of confusion and concern regarding where Colonel Gaddafi is and whether he will seek asylum in Burkina Faso, via … Continue reading
Having Cake and Eating it Too: An ICC Trial in Libya?
The past few days has seen an interesting shift in the debates regarding international justice in Libya. While many commentators, especially those who argue that justice can only hinder peace, were once happy to question whether Muammar Gaddafi, his son … Continue reading
Trying the Tripoli Three: Justice at Home or Away?
Andrew Jillions joins JiC once again to discuss where the Tripoli Three should be tried: in Libya or The Hague? With rebels storming Tripoli and Saif al-Islam reported captured, it seemed appropriate to consider the question of where those indicted … Continue reading
Peace and Justice in Libya – Tripoli Falling, Justice Rising?
Reports are proliferating that the Libyan capital of Tripoli is on the verge of collapse. The level of resistance in the country has apparently now been withered to “pockets”. While the location of Col. Muammar Gaddafi remains unknown, the BBC … Continue reading
Peace, Justice and Libya – the Gaddafi who Threatens it All?
It is nothing short of stunning how little we hear about Gaddafi these days. Articles in papers, posts on blogs, discussions amongst friends – virtually everywhere, even in discussions about peace and justice in Libya, Gaddafi is no where to … Continue reading
Negotiating Peace in Libya: What Happens to Justice?
While diplomats from all interested parties may not be willing to describe it as such, the crisis in Libya has reached the negotiation phase. Foreign ministers crisscrossing around the world, dropping in on various national capitals, testing the waters by suggesting … Continue reading