Abstract

Abbreviations Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction Flavia Lattanzi Chapter 1 'Fragmentation', Diversification and '3D' Legal Pluralism: International Criminal Law as the Jack-in-the-Box? Carsten Stahn & Larissa van den Herik Part I Institutional Aspects of Fragmentation Chapter 2 The Judicial Dialogue between the ICJ and International Criminal Courts on the Question of Immunity Rosanne van Alebeek Chapter 3 Binocular Vision: State Responsibility and Individual Criminal Responsibility for Genocide Philippa Webb Chapter 4 Finding Custom: The ICJ and the International Criminal Courts and Tribunals Compared Yeghishe Kirakosyan Chapter 5 Human Rights Cases in Sub-regional African Courts: Towards Justice for Victims or Just More Fragmentation? Helen Duff y Chapter 6 Praising the Region: What Might a Complementary Criminal Justice System Learn from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights? Cecilia Cristina Naddeo Chapter 7 The Regionalization of Criminal Law - the Example of European Criminal Law Ricardo Pereira Chapter 8 Alternative Justice Mechanisms, Compliance and Fragmentation of International Law Susan Kemp Chapter 9 Limits of Information-sharing between the International Criminal Court and Truth Commissions Eszter Kirs Chapter 10 Puzzling over Amnesties: Defragmenting the Debate for International Criminal Tribunals Dov Jacobs Part II Fragmentation of Substantive Law Chapter 11 Chinese Humanitarian Law and International Humanitarian Law Liu Daqun Chapter 12 Approximation or Harmonisation as a Result of Implementation of the Rome Statute David Donat Cattin Chapter 13 Fragmentation of the Rome Statute through an Incoherent Jurisdictional Regime for the Crime of Aggression: A Silent Operation Deborah Ruiz Verduzco Chapter 14 Domestic Prosecution of Genocide: Fragmentation or Natural Diversity? Cristina Fernandez-Pacheco Estrada Chapter 15 The Rome Statute and Domestic Proceedings for Ordinary Crimes: The (In)Admissibility of Cases before the International Criminal Court Beatrice Pisani Chapter 16 Fragmentation of the Notion of Co-Perpetration in International Criminal Law? Chantal Meloni Chapter 17 The Mens Rea Enigma in the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court Mohamed Elewa Badar Chapter 18 Reception of Common Law in Substantive International Criminal Law James L. Bischoff Chapter 19 The Principle of Complicity under International Law - Its Application to States and Individuals in Cases involving Genocide, Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes Erik Kok Part III Fragmentation and Criminal Procedure Chapter 20 Unifi cation or Fragmentation? Structural Tendencies in International Criminal Procedure Mark Klamberg Chapter 21 Prosecutorial Discretion in International Criminal Justice: Between Fragmentation and Unification Hitomi Takemura Chapter 22 Fragmentation in International Criminal Law and the Rights of Victims Margaret Burnham Chapter 23 The Influences of French Law on Appeal Proceedings before the International Criminal Court and the Tribunals Xavier Tracol Index.

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