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El. knyga: Exploring the Boundaries of International Criminal Justice [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (Nottingham Trent University, UK), (University of Sydney, Australia)
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This collection of ten essays examines international criminal justice along lines of historical development, balancing interests, conflicting regulatory forces and regulatory pluralism, authority and legitimacy, conceptual and institutional dichotomies, and global governance. They seek to answer a two-fold-question: where has international criminal justice come from and where is it going? The collection is divided into two parts with the first focusing on issues of legal vs. social accountability in international criminal justice, and the second developing themes of achieving justice beyond legal procedures as a paradigm for global governance. Some specific contributions consider the limitations of the liability paradigm, victim expectations toward justice in post-conflict societies, biopolitics, and global governance through criminalization. The contributors are mostly distinguished academics teaching criminology, international criminal justice and law in the UK. Annotation ©2011 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
List of Tables
vii
Notes on Contributors ix
1 Introduction: Rethinking International Criminal Justice?
1(26)
PART I ACHIEVING JUSTICE IN POST-CONFLICT SOCIETIES
2 Mass Atrocity: Theories and Concepts of Accountability --- On the Schizophrenia of Accountability
27(20)
Caroline Fournet
3 Collective Responsibility for Global Crime: Limitations with the Liability Paradigm
47(28)
Mark Findlay
4 Victims' Expectations towards Justice in Post-Conflict Societies: A Bottom-Up Perspective
75(30)
Ernesto Kiza
Holger-C. Rohne
5 Making International Criminal Procedure Work: From Theory to Practice
105(24)
Richard Vogler
6 Should States Bear the Responsibility of Imposing Sanctions on its Citizens who as Witnesses Commit Crimes before the ICC?
129(26)
Sylvia Ngane
PART II INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE AS GOVERNANCE
7 Exclusion and Inclusion: Bio-Politics and Global Governance through Criminalisation
155(24)
Edwin Bikindo
8 Contrasting Dynamics of Global Administrative Measures and International Criminal Courts: Cosmopolitanism, Multilateralism, State Interests
179(28)
Nicholas Dorn
9 Governing through Globalised Crime: Thoughts on the Transition from Terror
207(20)
Mark Findlay
10 Evaluating Sentencing as a Force for Achieving Justice in International Criminal Trials
227(26)
Ralph Henham
11 The Paradox of Global Terrorism and Community-Based Security Policing
253(22)
Clive Walker
Index 275
Ralph Henham is Professor of Criminal Justice at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University. His research interests are in International and Comparative Criminal Justice and International Sentencing and Penality in particular. He has published widely on these and related areas. Mark Findlay holds research chairs in Singapore and Australia, at the Law schools of the University of Sydney, Singapore Management University and until recently Leeds University and Nottingham Law School. He was for many years an Associate Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London, and is now the co-chair of the WUN International and Comparative Criminal Justice Network.