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Justice and Diplomacy: Resolving Contradictions in Diplomatic Practice and International Humanitarian Law

Edited by: Mark S Ellis, Yves Doutriaux, Timothy W. Ryback

ISBN13: 9781108441711
Published: May 2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £21.99



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Diplomacy is used primarily to advance the interests of a state beyond its borders, within a set of global norms intended to assure a degree of international harmony.

As a result of internal and international armed conflicts, the need to negotiate peace through an emerging system of international humanitarian and criminal law has required nations to use diplomacy to negotiate 'peace versus justice' trade-offs.

Justice and Diplomacy is the product of a research project sponsored by the Academie Diplomatique Internationale and the International Bar Association, and focuses on specific moments of collision or contradiction in diplomatic and judicial processes during the humanitarian crises in Bosnia, Rwanda, Kosovo, Darfur, and Libya.

The five case studies present critical issues at the intersection of justice and diplomacy, including the role of timing, signalling, legal terminology, accountability, and compliance. Each case study focuses on a specific moment and dynamic, highlighting the key issues and lessons learned.

Subjects:
Public International Law
Contents:
Introduction
1. Accountability: diplomatic and judicial process
2. Legal expertise: implications of legal terminology in diplomatic processes
3. Compliance: enforcing international arrest warrants through diplomacy
4. Timing and signaling: implications of judicial and diplomatic process
5. Alignment: identifying potential alignments between diplomatic and judicial processes.