Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court
The Blame Cascade
Sorozatcím: Clarendon Studies in Criminology;
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadó OUP Oxford
- Megjelenés dátuma 2024. június 20.
- ISBN 9780198870258
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem384 oldal
- Méret 223x145x26 mm
- Súly 602 g
- Nyelv angol 572
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
Drawing on critical theory, criminological analysis, and multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork, Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court illuminates how the ICC's victim engagement functions to reproduce the Court as a relevant institution and to transform victims in the Global South into productive capitalist subjects.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
Victim participation at the ICC has routinely been viewed as an empty promise of justice or mere spectacle for audiences in the Global North, providing little benefit for victims. Why, then, do people in Kenya and Uganda engage in justice processes that offer so little, so late? How and why do they become the court's victims and intermediaries, and what impact do these labels have on them?
Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court offers a response to these poignant questions, demonstrating that the notion of 'justice for victims' is not merely symbolic, expressive, or instrumental. On the contrary — the book argues — the ICC's methods of victim engagement are productive, reproducing the Court as a relevant institution and transforming victims in the Global South into highly gendered and racialized labouring subjects. Challenging the Court's interplay with global capitalist relationships, the book makes visible the hidden labour of justice, and how it lures, disciplines, and blames both victims and victims' advocates.
Drawing on critical theory, criminological analysis, and multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork in The Hague, Kenya, and Uganda, Victims and the Labour of Justice at the International Criminal Court illuminates how the drive to include victims as participants in international criminal justice proceedings also creates and disciplines them as blameworthy capitalist subjects. Yet, as victim workers learn to 'stop crying', 'be peaceful', 'get married', 'work hard', and 'repay debt', they also begin to challenge the terms of global justice.
This extraordinary study of the International Criminal Court illuminates how the minutia of the court's institutional processes interpolate and refract the injustices of the dominant world order. This is socio-legal analysis at its best — elegantly combining ethnographic fieldwork in Uganda, Kenya and the Hague with macro-analysis of the racial-capitalist world order that produced and shapes the court. A gifted theorist and storyteller, the book offers a compelling, stinging critique of the international criminal justice machinery while attentive to how 'victims', resist, decenter and sometimes smash the machines that seek to conscript them into further victimization. Brilliant, original and intellectually rigorous from start to finish, Ullrich's book is destined to shape the field it studies.
Tartalomjegyzék:
Introduction
What Is Justice and Does It Matter? The Rome Statute and Its Disciples
Creating the Victim: From Innocent Victims to Indebted Subjects
Translators, Compradors, or Ideological Labourers? The Role of the ICC's Intermediaries
Reparations, Abolitionist Imaginaries, and Self-transforming Victims: Transformative Justice at the ICC
Money and Land: Resistance in Times of Capitalist Complementarity
Conclusion