Abstract

Abstract The creation of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) marked the affirmation and negation of the Nuremberg Tribunal's legacy. The ICTY had been given a mandate to continue in the legal footsteps of Nuremberg by prosecuting egregious violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL). But the ICTY also established a lasting legacy all of its own by seeking to prosecute suspects from all combatant groups in the former Yugoslavia, including the victorious sides. The aim of this chapter is to twofold: (1) to assess how well the ICTY confronted the spectre of victor’s justice in the context of the Croatia case and (2) to examine the strategies the Tribunal and allied states used to overcome Croatian state non-compliance..

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