Abstract

The influence of scholars and practitioners on the development and conceptualization of international criminal law.- 'satires of Circumstance': Some Notes on War Crimes Trials and Irony.- The Banality of Evil on Trial.- Why International Criminal Lawyers Should Read Mirjan Damaska.- The Gentle Humanizer of Humanitarian Law - Antonio Cassese and the Creation of the Customary Law of Non-International Armed Conflict.- The International Criminal Legal Process: Towards a Realistic Model of International Criminal Law in Action.- Theorizing international criminal justice.- The Two Liberalisms of International Criminal Law.- International Criminal Law at the Crossroads: From ad Hoc Imposition to a Treaty-Based Universal System.- In Search of the 'Vertical': Towards an Institutional Theory of International Criminal Justice's Core.- Re-assessing the balance between international and domestic jurisdiction.- Situational Gravity Under the Rome Statute.- When Law 'Expresses' More Than it Cares to Admit: Comments on Heller.- Should the Prosecution of Ordinary Crimes in Domestic Jurisdictions Satisfy the Complementarity Principle?.- Interpreting Complementarity and Interests of Justice in the Presence of Restorative-Based Alternative Forms of Justice.- Universal Jurisdiction and the Prosecution of Excluded Asylum Seekers.- De-individualizing international criminal law: Can abstract entities commit international crimes after all?.- The Inter-American Court of Human Rights and Aggravated State Responsibility: Operationalizing the Concept of State Crime.- Corporations as Future Subjects of the International Criminal Court: An Exploration of the Counterarguments and Consequences.- Grey War Zone? The Question of Contractual Control of the Privatization of Warfare and Civilianization of the Military.- Holding Private Military Corporations Accountable for Their Crimes: The Applicability of the Command/Superior Responsibility Doctrine to Crimes of Pmcs.- Crime definitions revisited.- Defining the Crime of Aggression.- Complementarity and Aggression: A Ticking Time Bomb?.- The Recruitment and Use of Child Soldiers: Some Reflections on the Prosecution of a New War Crime.- System-criminality and the principle of personal fault: A balancing test in setting the appropriate standards for modes of liability.- The Difficulty with Individual Criminal Responsibility in International Criminal Law.- Current Trends on Modes of Liability for Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes.- From 'Conspiracy' to 'Joint Criminal Enterprise': In Search of the Organizational Parameter.- Towards one international criminal procedure?.- Trends in the Development of a Unified Law of International Criminal Procedure.- Witness Memory and the Manufacture of Evidence at the International Criminal Tribunals.- Remedies for War Victims.- Victim Partication in ICC Proceedings.- Arrest and Surrender Under the ICC Statute: A Contextual Reading.

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