| 000 | 02544nam a2200217Ia 4500 | ||
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| 999 |
_c29144 _d29144 |
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| 003 | OSt | ||
| 005 | 20210106153043.0 | ||
| 008 | 160316s2011 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
| 020 | _a9781107011571 | ||
| 040 | _cNLS | ||
| 082 |
_a341.77 _bSTA-II |
||
| 100 | _aStahn Garsten | ||
| 245 | _aThe international criminal court and complementarity : From theory and practice Vol. II | ||
| 260 |
_aCambridge _bCambridge University Press _c2011 |
||
| 300 |
_a1292 _cxviii |
||
| 365 | _bRs. 19,680 Vol | ||
| 505 | _aContents: Volume 2: 21. States' obligations to investigate and prosecute perpetrators of international crimes: the perspective of the European Court of Human Rights; 22. The law and policy of complementarity in relation to 'criminal proceedings' carried out by non-state organized armed groups; 23. Complementarity and the crime of aggression; 24. Complementarity and alternative forms of justice: a new test for ICC admissibility; 25. Complementarity and 'reverse cooperation'; 26. In the hands of the state: implementing legislation and complementarity; Part V. Complementarity in Perspective: 27. Horizontal complementarity; 28. The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia ('ICTY') and the transfer of cases and materials to national judicial authorities: lessons in complementarity; 29. Positive complementarity in practice: ICTY rule 11bis and the use of the tribunal's evidence in the Srebrenica trials before the Bosnian War Crimes Chamber; 30. Complementarity of procedures: how to avoid reinventing the wheel; Part VI. Complementarity in Practice: 31. Making complementarity work: maximising the limited role of the prosecutor; 32. Positive complementarity in action; 33. Complementarity and the construction of national ability; 34. The Colombian Peace Process (Law 975 of 2005) and the ICC's principle of complementarity; 35. Darfur: complementarity as the drafters intended?; 36. Complementarity in Uganda: domestic diversity or international imposition?; 37. Courts, conflict and complementarity in Uganda; 38. Chasing cases: the ICC and the politics of state referral in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda; 39. A problem, not a solution: complementarity in the Central African Republic and Democratic Republic of Congo; 40. Complementarity and the impact of the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court in Kenya. | ||
| 650 | _a1.International criminal courts2.International offences - Law and legislation | ||
| 700 |
_aElzeidy Mohamed M _a |
||
| 942 |
_2ddc _cBK |
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