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Model(ing) Justice: Perfecting the Promise of International Criminal Law


ISBN13: 9781108417693
Published: February 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £88.99



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The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was the first and most celebrated of a wave of international criminal tribunals (ICTs) built in the 1990s and designed to advance liberalism through international criminal law. Model(ing) Justice examines the practice and case law of the ICTY to make a novel theoretical analysis of the structural flaws inherent in ICTs as institutions that inhibit their contribution to social peace and prosperity.

Kerstin Bree Carlson proposes a seminal analysis of the structural challenges to ICTs as socially constitutive institutions, setting the agenda for future considerations of how international organizations can perform and disseminate the goals articulated by political liberalism.

Subjects:
International Criminal Law
Contents:
Introduction, Using Courts to Heal Countries: Transitional Justice and International Criminal Law
Introduction to Part I
1. Nuremberg Defines Our Time: The Promise of International Criminal Law
2. Non-Derogation and International Criminal Law: Situating the ICTY
Introduction to Part II
3. Post Rule of Law: International Criminal Procedure and Its Evolution before the ICTY
4. When Non-Derogable Principles Meet Criminal Liability: The Justice Problem of JCE
Introduction to Part III
5. History, Trials, and Collective Memory
6. Failures in Reconciliation: The Lost Opportunity of Milan Babic, "Reformed Nationalist"
Conclusion, Towards "ICL 3G"