31. | Andreassen, Bård-Anders (red.) : Forsoning eller rettferdighet?, 1998 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Forsoning eller rettferdighet? : om beskyttelse av menneskerettighetene gjennom sannhetskommisjoner og rettstribunaler / Andreassen, Bård-Anders (red.) ; Skaar, Elin, 384 p.. - Oslo : Cappelen Akademisk forlag, 1998. ISBN 82-456-0627-8 LANGUAGE: NOR INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; |
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32. | Gottlieb, Yaron : Shattered stones, shattered societies, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Shattered stones, shattered societies : confronting destruction of cultural property in post-transitional societies / Gottlieb, Yaron REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Netherlands quarterly of human rights (NQHR) : vol. 23; no. 4., p. 613-636. - Utrecht : SIM, 2005. - ISSN 0169-3441 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Cambodia / Afghanistan
URL http://www.nqhr.net/pdf/?articleId=76fc01ec224f0bc2-2d4dfd7396fef80 |
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33. | Erdogan, Birsen : Turkey's compliance with European Union democratic conditionality, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Turkey's compliance with European Union democratic conditionality : resistance or transformation of identity? / Erdogan, Birsen REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Netherlands quarterly of human rights (NQHR) : vol. 25; no. 1., p. 21-52. - Utrecht : SIM, 2007. - ISSN 0169-3441 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Turkey
URL http://www.nqhr.net/pdf/?articleId=93a5b634ab1ca79e-61ec032428aea043 |
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34. | Mallinder, Louise : Amnesty, human rights and political transitions, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Amnesty, human rights and political transitions : bridging the peace and justice divide / Mallinder, Louise - (Studies in international law ; vol. 21), xlvi, 586 p.. - Oxford : Hart, 2008. ISBN 978-1-84113-771-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part I: Amnesties and Peacemaking: Context and Content:. 1. Enacting Amnesties. 2. Whom do Amnesties Protect? The Personal Jurisdiction of Amnesty Laws. 3. Granting Immunity? The Material Scope of Amnesty Laws. 4. Towards Greater Accountability: The Role of Conditional Amnesties. Part II: Approach of Courts to Amnesties:. 5. Implementing the Amnesty: The Approach of National Courts. 6. International Courts and National Amnesty Laws. 7. Beyond Territoriality: Transnational Prosecutions and Amnesties. Part III: Views of Stakeholder Groups:. 8. Legal Obligations v Self-interest: The Contradictory Approach of International Actors to Amnesty. 9. Prioritising Needs: Amnesties and the Views of Victims. 10. Promoting Participation: Making Amnesties Attractive to the Targeted Groups. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / ALbania / Algeria / Angola / Argentina / Austria / Belgium / Benin / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Brazil / Bulgaria / Burma / Burundi / Cambodia / Chand / Chile / Colombia / Congo / Egypt / El Salvador / Eritea / Ethiopia / France / Gambia / Gerogia / Germany / Ghana / Greece / Guatemala / Guinea / haiti / Hungary / India / Indonesia / Iran / Iraq / Israel / Italy / japan / Kyrgyzstan / Lebanon / Lesotho / Madagascar / Malawi / Mauritania / Moldova / Morocco / Mozambique / New Caledonia / Nicaragua / Niger / Nigeria / Northern Ireland / Uganda / Panama / Peru / Pakistan / Papua New Guinea / Philippines / poland / Saudi Arabia / Sierra Leone / Slovakia / Somalia / South Africa / Spain / Sri Lanka / Tajikistan / Tanzania / Togo / Turkey / Uganda / Uruguay / Viet nam / Yemen / Yugoslavia / Zaire / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): Dayton peace agreement; ACHPR; AMR; ADRD; UN charter; Convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; Genocide convention; Refugee convention; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Inter-American convention on forced disappearance of persons; ICESCR; ICCPR; CRC-OP; ICC statute; UDHR; Vienna convention onthe law of treaties; CAT; |
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35. | Stigen, Jo : The relationship between the International Criminal Court and national jurisdictions, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The relationship between the International Criminal Court and national jurisdictions : the principle of complementarity / Stigen, Jo - (The Raoul Wallenberg Institute human rights library ; vol. 34), xii, 533 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-90-04-16909-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Abbreviations; Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. Why and Where Should International Crimes be Prosecuted?; 3. The History of the Complementarity Principle; 4. The Procedures of the Complementarity Principle; 5. The Scope of Article 17; 6. “Genuine” National Proceedings: Related Concepts of International Law; 7. The Applicability of the Admissibility Criteria in Three Particular Scenarios; 8. Unwillingness; 9. Inability; 10. Possible Lacunas in the Admissibility Criteria; 11. The Prosecutorial Discretion; 12. Complementarity and Alternative National Mechanisms; 13. Conclusive Remarks; Index; Bibliography; Selected Documents; Table of Cases. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; UN charter; CAT; Tokyo charter; AMR; ACHPR; ECHR; ICCPR; |
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36. | Ferstman, Carla (ed.) : Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity : systems in place and systems in the making / Ferstman, Carla (ed.) ; Goetz, Mariana ; Stephens, Alan, vii, 575 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17449-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Preface (Judge Elizabeth Odio Benito). Introduction, (Carla Ferstman, Mariana Goetz and Alan Stephens). Part I: Reparations for Victims – Key Themes and Concepts:. 1. Victims’ Rights to a Remedy and Reparation: the New United Nations Principles and Guidelines (Professor Theo Van Boven); 2. Reparation Programmes: A Gendered Perspective (Anne Saris and Katherine Lofts); 3. Massive Trauma and the Healing Role of Reparative Justice (Yael Danieli, Ph.D.). Part II: Reparations and the Holocaust:. 4. The Claims Conference and the Historic Jewish Efforts for Holocaust-Related Compensation and Restitution (Gideon Taylor, Greg Schneider and Saul Kagan); 5. The Swiss Banks Holocaust Settlement (Judah Gribetz and Shari C. Reig). Part III: The Internationalised Context of ‘Mass Claims’:. 6. Overcoming Evidentiary Weaknesses in Reparation Claims Programmes - The Mass Claims Context (Heike Niebergall); 7. International Mass Claims Processes and the ICC Trust Fund for Victims (Edda Kristjánsdóttir); 8. The United Nations Compensation Commission (Linda A. Taylor). Part IV: Reparations and International and Regional Courts:. 9. Bringing Justice to Victims? Responses of Regional and International Human Rights Courts and Treaty Bodies to Mass Violations (Dr. Lutz Oette); 10. The Concepts of ‘Injured Party’ and ‘Victim’ of Gross Human Rights Violations in the Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: A Commentary on their Implications for Reparations (Clara Sandoval-Villalba); 11. Reparation for Gross Violations of Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law at the International Court of Justice (Conor McCarthy); 12. Reparations and the International Criminal Court (Carla Ferstman and Mariana Goetz). Part V: Pursuing Extraterritorial Reparations Claims – Lawyers’ Perspectives:. 13. The Prosecution of International Crimes and the Role of Victims’ Lawyers (Luc Walleyn); 14. Compensation for the Victims of Chemical Warfare in Iraq and Iran (Liesbeth Zegveld); Part VI: Reparations in National (Territorial) Contexts: 15. Reparations and Victim Participation: A Look at the Truth Commission Experience (Cristián Correa, Julie Guillerot and Lisa Magarrell); 16. The Argentinean Reparations Programme for Grave Violations of Human Rights Perpetrated During the Last Military Dictatorship (1976-1983) (Andrea Gualde and Natalia Luterstein); 17. Reparations for Victims in Colombia: Colombia´s Law on Justice and Peace (Julián Guerrero Orozco and Mariana Goetz); 18. Policy Challenges for Property Restitution in Transition - The Example of Iraq (Peter Van der Auweraert); 19. Reparations in Dayton’s Bosnia and Herzegovina (Carla Ferstman and Sheri P. Rosenberg); 20. Goats & Graves: Reparations in Rwanda’s Community Courts (Lars Waldorf); 21. Still Not Talking: The South African Government's Exclusive Reparations Rolicy and the Impact of the R30,000 Financial Reparations on Survivors (Oupa Makhalemele); Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CERD; CEDAW; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; International convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; Nairobi declaration on women's and girls' right to a remedy and reparation; ICC statute; UDHR; CAT; |
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37. | May, Larry (ed.) : International criminal law and philosophy, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal law and philosophy / May, Larry (ed.) ; Hoskins, Zachary, viii, 258 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-521-19151-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction Larry May and Zach Hoskins:. Part A. Sovereignty and Universal Jurisdiction: 1. International crimes and universal jurisdiction, by Win-chiat Lee. 2. State sovereignty as an obstacle to international criminal law, by Kristen Hessler; 3. International criminal courts, the rule of law, and the prevention of harm: building justice in times of injustice, by Leslie Francis and John Francis. Part B. Culture, Groups, and Corporations: 4. Criminalizing culture, by Helen Stacy; 5. Identifying groups in genocide cases, by Larry May; 6. Prosecuting corporations for international crimes: the role for domestic criminal law, by Joanna Kyriakakis. Part C. Justice and International Criminal Prosecutions: 7. Post war environmental damage: a study in jus post bellum, by Douglas Lackey; 8. On state self-defense and Guantánamo Bay, by Steve Viner; 9. Politicizing human rights (using international law), by Anat Biletzki. Part D. Punishment and Reconciliation: 10. The justification of punishment in the international context, by Deirdre Golash; 11. Political reconciliation and international criminal trials, by Colleen Murphy. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Cambodia / Canada / China / East Timor / El Salvador / Ethiopia / France / Germany / Ghana / India / Iraq / Israel / Japan / Kenya / Myanmar / Norway / Netherlands / Rwanda / Serbia / Sierra Leone / South Africa / Spain / Sri Lanka / Sudan / Sweden / Tanzania / Uganda / United Kingdom / USA / Uruguay / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Guantanamo Bay Kosovo Palestine NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; CRC; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; CAT;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521191517 |
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38. | Bassiouni, M. Cherif (ed.) : The pursuit of international criminal justice, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The pursuit of international criminal justice : a world study on conflicts, victimization and post-conflict justice : volume 2 / Bassiouni, M. Cherif (ed.), viii, 1037 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2010. ISBN ~978-94-000-0017-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART III. REGIONAL STUDIES:. 1. ARAB WORLD: Regional Report, by Ayman Salama, Mohammed Ayat, Hicham Cherkaoui, Michael Wahid Hanna and Sinem Taskin. Summary and Recommendations of the Regional Conference, Cairo, Egypt, January 15–17, 2009 2. CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA:. Regional Report, by Victor Rodrìguez-Rescia. Case Study: Colombia – Marìa Paula Saffon and Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes. Summary and Recommendations of the Regional Conference, San José, Costa Rica, February 20–21, 2009. 3. AFRICA:. Regional Report, by José Doria, Christopher Mullins, Dawn L. Rothe and Catherine Jenkins. Summary and Recommendations of the Regional Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, March 24–25, 2009. 4. ASIA:. Regional Report, by Suzannah Linton. Case Studies: Burma – Guy Horton. Sri Lanka – Mario Gomez. Summary and Recommendations of the Regional Conference, Bangkok, Th ailand, April 27–28, 2009. 5. EUROPE:. Regional Report, by David Donat Cattin, Alexander Brod, Natalia Rykova, Teimuraz Antelava, Floribert H. Baudet, S.A.M. Huiberts-Van Dijk, Göran Sluiter, S.V. Vasiliev, Lord John Alderdice and José Luis de la Cuesta Arzamendi. Summary and Recommendations of the Regional Conference, Th e Hague, Th e Netherlands, June 7, 2009. 6. SUMMARY OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE HELD AT THE PEACE PALACE, THE HAGUE, JUNE 8, 2009. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICC statute; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ECHR; CERD; Genocide convention; |
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39. | Derluyn, Ilse ... [et al.] : Re-member, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Re-member : rehabilitation, reintegration and reconciliation of war-affected children / Derluyn, Ilse ... [et al.] - (Series on transitional justice ; 11), xxxviii, 568 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2012. ISBN 978-94-000-0027-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Preface, by Radhika Coomaraswamy. Foreword, by Jaap E. Doek. Introduction: Children Aff ected by Armed Confl ict at the Intersection of Th ree Fields of Study, by Cindy Mels, Ilse Derluyn, Stephan Parmentier and Wouter Vandenhole. PART I SETTING THE SCENE: THREE DISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES:. 1. International Legal Protection for the Recovery and Reintegration of War-Affected Children, by Bo Viktor Nylund. 2. Psychosocial Well-Being and the Integration of War-Aff ected Children: Toward a Community Resilience Approach, by Michael Wessells. 3. Integrating Transitional Justice and Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration: Th e Need to Achieve Rehabilitation, Reintegration and Reconciliation for Child Soldiers and Child Victims of Enforced Disappearances, by Jeremy Sarkin. PART II LESSONS LEARNT FROM CURRENT PRACTICES AND APPROACHES:. 4. And the Children Learned Not to Cry: Stories About Children and Transitional Justice in Latin America, by Javier Ciurlizza. 5. When Hurbinek Survives. Transitional Justice and Children’s Rights: Lessons Learnt from Rwanda, by Pietro Sullo. 6. “We Have Life Without Living”: Addressing the Legacies of Genocide for Rwanda’s Children and Youth, by Kirrily Pells. 7. Rehabilitating Separated Children Th rough Holistic, Community-Based Models, by Jessica Muir and Elhum Shakerifar. 8. Release and Reintegration of Child Soldiers: One Part of a Bigger Puzzle, by Lucia Withers. 9. No Return Home: Th e (Non-)Reintegration of Youth Ex-Combatants in Sierra Leone as a Challenge to the Contextualisation of DDR and Transitional Justice, by Martien Schotsmans. 10. Support to the Education and Livelihoods of War-Aff ected Children and Youth in Northern Uganda, by Ann Lorschiedter and Femke Bannink-Mbazzi. 11. Transitional Justice Implications for the Use of Child Soldiers in Eritrea, by Daniel R. Mekonnen. 12. Children in Twentieth Century Europe Aff ected by War: Historical Experiences in Giving Them Refuge, by Frank Caestecker. PART III EXPLORING RESOURCES THROUGH EMPIRICAL RESEARCH:. 13. Life in Rebel Captivity and its Challenges for the Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Reintegration of Former Child Soldiers: The Case of Northern Uganda, by Sofi e Vindevogel, Kathleen Coppens, Ilse Derluyn, Gerrit Loots and Eric Broekaert. 14. Psychosocial Care in Rehabilitation Centres for Former Child Soldiers in Northern Uganda, by Kathleen Coppens, Sofie Vindevogel, Ilse Derluyn, Gerrit Loots and Eric Broekaert. 15. Lessons Learnt from the Rehabilitation and Reintegration of Girl Mothers in Northern Uganda: A Case-Study from Gulu District, by Sarah Kamya and Charles N. Bwana. 16. Community-Based Approaches to the Reintegration of Self-Demobilised Child Soldiers: Th e Case of the Democratic Republic of Congo, by Mulanda Juma. 6. Approaches to the Reintegration of Self-Demobilised Child Soldiers and the Role of the Community:. 17. Psychosocial Adjustment and Mental Health Services in Post-Confl ict Sierra Leone: Experiences of CAAFAG and War-Aff ected Youth, Families and Service Providers, by Theresa Betancourt, Sandra Zaeh, A’Nova Ettien and Laura Khan . 18. The Fit Between Mental Health Needs and Programming Responses for War-Aff ected Children in Northern Uganda, by James Okello, Ilse Derluyn, Seggane Musisi and Eric Broekaert. PART IV LOOKING BACK, REACHING FORWARD:. 19. War-Aff ected Children, International Crisis of Meaning, and the Limits of Rehabilitation Programmes, by Vanessa Pupavac. 20. Exploring the Context for Adolescent Mental Health and Psychosocial Assistance in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, by Cindy Mels, Ilse Derluyn, Eric Broekaert and Koen Vlassenroot. 21. A Gender Perspective on Girls and Young Women in Armed Confl icts and Organised Armed Violence – Some Examples from Latin America, by Maria Luisa Bartolomei. 22. On Children’s Rights and Wrongs: Th e Challenges for a Rights-Based Approach to Reintegration, by Yannick Weyns. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Latin America / Argentina / Colombia / Rwanda / Uganda / Spain / Congo / Sierra Leone / El Salvador NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; ICC statute; |
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40. | May, Larry : Genocide, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Genocide : a normative account / May, Larry - Cambridge, 2010. ISBN 978-0-521-12296-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Introduction: problems of genocide. PART A: The Nature of Value of Groups:. 2. Nominalism and the constituents of social groups. 3. Identifying groups in genocide cases. PART B: The Harm of Genocide:. 4. Harm to a group itself. 5. Harms to identity of a group's members. PART C: Elements of Genocide:. 6. Destroying groups in whole or in part. 7. Collective and individual intent. 8. Motive and destruction of a group 'as such'. PART D. Responsibility for Genocide:. 9. Complicity and the Rwandan genocide. 10. Incitement to genocide and the Rwandan media case. 11. Instigating, planning, and intending genocide in Rwanda. PART E. Special Problems of Genocide:. 12. Genocide and humanitarian intervention. 13. Reconciliation, criminal trials, and genocide. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Rwanda NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Genocide convention;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/fi/knowledge/isbn/item2703595/?site_locale=fi_FI |
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41. | Simic, Olivera (ed.) : An introduction to transitional justice, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph An introduction to transitional justice / Simic, Olivera (ed.), 313 p. - London : Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-138-94322-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Anja Mihr: An introduction to transitional justice. 2. Andrew G. Reiter: The development of transitional justice. 3. Rachel Kerr: International criminal justice. 4. Annika Björkdahl and Johanna Mannergen Selimovic: Gender and transitional justice. 5. Agata Fijalkowski: Truth and reconciliation commissions. 6. Agata Fijalkowski: Amnesty. 7. Lavinia Stan: Lustration and vetting. 8. Lars Waldorf: Local transitional justice: customary law, healing rituals, and everyday justice. 9. Jemima Garcia-Godos: Reparations. 10. Lia Kent: Transitional justice and peacebuilding. 11. Olivera Simic: Arts and transitional justice. 12. Susanne Buckley-Zistel and Annika Björkdahl: Memorials and transitional justice. 13. Andrew D. Reiter: Measuring the success (or failure) of transitional justice. 14. Olivera Simic: Doing the fieldwork: well-being of transitional justice researchers. INDEX WORDS:
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