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  • War Crimes - Whose Justice?: Post-war legacies, present practices and new understandings

    War Crimes - Whose Justice? by Kandiah, Michael; Rowbotham, Judith;

    Post-war legacies, present practices and new understandings

    Series: Routledge SOLON Explorations in Crime and Criminal Justice Histories;

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher Routledge
    • Date of Publication 15 August 2040

    • ISBN 9780415810722
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages256 pages
    • Size 234x156 mm
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This book provides a survey of key issues in the study and management of War Crimes for academics, practitioners and policy makers and contextualises current issues in both a chronological historical dimension and a historical methodology.

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    Long description:

    This book provides a survey of key issues in the study and management of War Crimes for academics, practitioners and policy makers and contextualises current issues in both a chronological historical dimension and a historical methodology. Approaching this topic in such a way allows the author to highlight new issues, as well as continuing issues and, by differentiating between them, helps the reader to understand them better.


    In essence, this volume constitutes an entirely new approach, pioneering War Crimes as a discrete discipline and not simply as a sub-discipline of international law, politics, international criminal law or history. This book establishes an intellectual framework, drawing upon methodological perspectives from criminal justice, socio-legal studies and that pioneered by the Centre for Contemporary British History (CCBH at King?s), to help us understand where we stand today.

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    Table of Contents:

    Part 1: War, Sovereignty and the Development of the International Prosecution of War Crimes. Introducing Law, History and Theory  1. How the ?War on Terror? Changed Perceptions of the Legacy of Nuremberg  2. Is This How to Do It? The Belsen and Auschwitz Trial, the first British Investigation and Prosecution in Occupied Germany, 1945  3. Challenges in Prosecuting in Situations of Mass Atrocity  4. The Culturalisation of Identity in an Age of ?Ethnic Conflict? ? depoliticised gender in ICTY wartime sexual violence jurisprudence  5. An Unpleasant Afterthought: Post-Conviction Rights of Individuals Convicted at International War Crimes Tribunals  6. Re-thinking the Place of Indigenous Justice Mechanisms in International Criminal Law: The case of the Lord?s Resistance Army of Northern Uganda  7. Perpetuating Impunity: Consequences of the Non-Prosecution of Perpetrators of War Crimes in Namibia  Part 2: Modernity Emergent; International and National War Crimes Trials and the Role of NGOs  8. Forensics, memory and development  9. The Latent Danger in Sequencing Justice  10. Bangladesh War Crimes Tribunal ? A Wolf in Sheep?s Clothing?  11.Why Do Truth and Reconciliation Commissions Fail? The Case of the Democratic Republic of Congo  12. The War Crimes Chamber of the State Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina: some lessons for international criminal justice  13. Time for Stocktaking at the Extraordinary Chambers of the Courts of Cambodia  14. Principles for Dealing with Gender from Practical Experiences in the Field  15. Rwanda and the Gendering Post-Conflict Tensions.

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