1. | Osiel, Mark : Making sense of mass atrocity, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Making sense of mass atrocity / Osiel, Mark, xviii, 257 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-521-86185-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. The challenge of prosecuting mass atrocity. PART I. Legal Rules and Their Problems: 2. The responsibility of superiors; 3. Participating in a criminal enterprise; 4. Defining the criminal enterprise. PART II. The Political Context of Legal Choice:. 5. Must national prosecutions serve global concerns?; 6. The conflicting incentives of national and international prosecutors. PART III. New Possibilities and Solutions:. 7. The bureaucracy of murder; 8. Collective sanctions for collective wrong; 9. The collective responsibility of military officers; 10. Being economical with amnesty. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Argentina / Brazil / Canada / Chechnya / Chile / China / Colombia / Croatia / Congo / Ecuador / Georgia / Greece / Guatemala / Haiti / Indonesia / Iraq / Japan / Netherlands / Nigeria / Pakistan / Peru / Poland / Rwanda / El Salvador / Serbia / South Africa / South America / Sri Lanka / Sudan / USA / Uzbekistan / Former Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; AMR; ICC statute;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521861854 |
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2. | Fiss, Owen : Within reach of the state : prosecuting atrocities in Africa, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Within reach of the state : prosecuting atrocities in Africa / Fiss, Owen REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : a comparative and international journal of the social sciences, humanities and law : vol. 31; no. 1., p. 59-69. - Baltimore, MA : John Hopkins U. P., 2009. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/v031/31.1.fiss.html |
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3. | Brunnée, Jutta : Legitimacy and legality in international law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Legitimacy and legality in international law : an interactional account / Brunnée, Jutta ; Toope, Stephen J. - (Cambridge studies in international and comparative law ; 67), xviii, 411 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-521-70683-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction. 1. An interactional theory of international legal obligation. 2. Shared understandings: making and unmaking international law. 3. Interactional law and compliance: law's hidden power. 4. Climate change: building a global legal regime. 5. Torture: undermining normative ambition. 6. The use of force: normative ebb and flow. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Israel / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; ICC statute; Kyoto protocol; Framework convention on climate change; ACHPR; AMR; ICCPR; ECHR; Geneva conventions; ICJ statute;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521706834 |
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4. | Kuwali, Daniel : Persuasive prevention, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Persuasive prevention : implementation of the AU right of intervention / Kuwali, Daniel, xii, 435 p.. - Lund : Lunds Universitet. Lund University. Faculty of Law, 2009. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: I. Approach and Theoretical Framework of the Study. II. Preliminary Considerations. III. Methodology and Materials. IV. Disposition. PART One: The Question of Treaty-Based Intervention:. 1. The End of Humanitarian Intervention: Article 4(h) Intervention. 2. Authorised Authorisation? The Question of Enforcement by Consent. PART Two: Deciding to Intervene:. 3. Mass Atrocity Crimes: Conundrum of Conditions for Intervention. 4. Agenda for Prevention: Architecture for Article 4(h) Intervention. PART Three: Modalities of Intervention:. 5. Negotiating Intervention: Expanding the Frontiers of Article 4(h). 6 Just Peace: Settling the Peace or Justice Debate through Article 4(h); Part Four: Implementation of Article 4(h) 7 Actualising Article 4(h) – A Framework for Intervention by the AU; 8 “Persuasive Prevention”: Methodology for Implementing Article 4(h); 9 Conclusion: The Case for “Persuasive Prevention”; Bibliography; Index INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Please note: this dissertation is published my M. Nijhoff with the title The Responsibility to Protect: Implementation of Article 4(h) Intervention. ACHPR; ICCPR; UN charter-51-53; Vienna convention on the law of treaties-51; UN charter-chap. VII; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICC statute; ICTR statute; LIBRARY LOCATION: Main library - ÅAB |
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5. | Tanaka, Yuki (ed.) : Beyond victor's justice, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Beyond victor's justice : the Tokyo war crimes trial revisited / Tanaka, Yuki (ed.) ; McCormack, Tim ; Simpson, Gerry - (International humanitarian law series ; vol. 30), xxxi, 402 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2011. ISBN 978-9004-20303-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART ONE: A RETROPERSPECTIVE:. Chapter 1: The Tokyo Trial: Humanity’s Justice v Victors’ Justice, by Fujita Hisakazu. Chapter 2: Writing the Tokyo Trial, by Gerry Simpson. Chapter 3: Japanese Societal Attitude towards the Tokyo Trial: From a Contemporary Perspective, by Madoka Futamura. PART TWO : THE ACCUSED:. Chapter 4: Selecting Defendants at the Tokyo Trial, by Awaya Kentaro. Chapter 5: The Decision Not to Prosecute the Emperor, by Yoriko Otomo. PART THREE : THE JUDGES:. Chapter 6 : Justice Northcroft (New Zealand), by Ann Trotter. Chapter 7 : Justice Bernard (France), by Mickaël Ho Foui Sang. Chapter 8: Justice Patrick (United Kingdom), by Lord Bonomy. Chapter 9: Justice Roling (The Netherlands), by Robert Cryer. Chapter 10: Justice Pal (India), by Nakajima Takeshi. PART FOUR: THE TRIAL PROCEEDINGS:. Chapter 11: The Case against the Accused, by Yuma Totani. Chapter 12: Command Responsibility for the Failure to Stop Atrocities: The Legacy of the Tokyo Trial, by Gideon Boas. PART FIVE: FORGOTTEN CRIMES : CHINA AND KOREA: Chapter 13: Reasons for the Failure to Prosecute Unit 731 and Its Significance, by Tsuneishi Kei-ichi. Chapter 14: The Legacy of the Tokyo Trial in China, by Bing Bing Jia. Chapter 15: Forgotten Victims, Forgotten Defendants, by The Hon O-Gon Kwon. PART SIX: FORGOTTEN CRIMES: THE COMFORT WOMEN:. Chapter 16: Knowledge and Responsibility: The Ongoing Consequences of Failing to Give Sufficient Attention to the Crimes against the Comfort Women in the Tokyo Trial, by Ustinia Dolgopol. Chapter 17: Silence as Collective Memory: Sexual Violence and the Tokyo Trial, by Nicola Henry. Chapter 18: Women’s Bodies and International Criminal Law: From Tokyo to Rabaul, by Helen Durham and Narrelle Morris. PART SEVEN: FORGOTTEN CRIMES:ATOMIC BOMBS, SATURATION BOMING AND THE ILLICIT DRUG TRADE:. Chapter 19 The Atomic Bombing, the Tokyo Tribunal and the Shimoda Case: Lessons for Anti-Nuclear Legal Movements, by Yuki Tanaka. Chapter 20: The Firebombing of Tokyo and Other Japanese Cities, by Ian Henderson. Chapter 21: Punishing Japan’s ‘Opium War-Making’ in China: The Relationship between Transnational Crime and Aggression at the Tokyo Tribunal, by Neil Boister. PART EIGHT : TOKYO TODAY:. Chapter 22: Tokyo’s Continuing Relevance, by Sarah Finnin and Tim McCormack. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CAT; Convention on the prohibition of the use, stockpilling, protection and transfer of anti-personnel mines and of their destruction; Tokyo charter; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Hague conventions; UDHR; ICCPR; IMT charter; Nuremburg charter; Montevideo convention on the rights and duties of states;
URL http://www.brill.nl/beyond-victors-justice-tokyo-war-crimes-trial-revisited |
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6. | Sadat, Leila Nadya : Forging a convention for crimes against humanity, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Forging a convention for crimes against humanity / Sadat, Leila Nadya, xxviii, 565 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-521-11648-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Crimes against humanity and the responsibility to protect Gareth Evans 2. History of efforts to codify crimes against humanity: from the charter of Nuremberg to the statute of Rome Roger S. Clark 3. The universal repression of crimes against humanity before national jurisdictions: the need for a treaty-based obligation to prosecute Payam Akhavan 4. Revisiting the architecture of crimes against humanity: almost a century in the making with gaps and ambiguities remaining – the need for a specialized convention M. Cherif Bassiouni 5. The bright red thread: the politics of international criminal law – the West African experience – a case study: operation justice in Sierra Leone David Crane 6. Gender-based crimes against humanity Valerie Oosterveld 7. 'Chapeau elements' of crimes against humanity in the jurisprudence of the United Nations ad hoc tribunals Göran Sluiter 8. The definition of crimes against humanity and the question of a 'policy' element Guénaël Mettraux 9. Ethnic cleansing as euphemism, metaphor, criminology and law John Hagan and Todd J. Haugh 10. Immunities and amnesties Diane Orentlicher 11. Modes of participation Elies van Sliedregt 12. Terrorism and crimes against humanity Michael P. Scharf and Michael A. Newton 13. Crimes against humanity and the international criminal court Kai Ambos 14. Crimes against humanity and the responsibility to protect David Scheffer 15. Re-enforcing enforcement in a specialized convention on crimes against humanity: inter-state cooperation, mutual legal assistance, and the aut dedere aut judicare obligation Laura M. Olson 16. Why the world needs an international convention on crimes against humanity Gregory H. Stanton INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CAT; Genocide convention; ICC statute; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; CERD; Convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; Terrorist financing convention; Apartheid convention; Terrorist bombing convention; ICCPR; ICTR statute; Worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182);
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item5759557/?site_locale=en_GB |
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7. | Drumbl, Mark A. : Reimagining child soldiers in international law and policy, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reimagining child soldiers in international law and policy / Drumbl, Mark A., xii, 239 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-959266-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1: Coming of Age in Atrocity. 2: Children Who Soldier: Practices, Politics, and Perceptions. 3: Not So Simple. 4: Child Soldiers and Accountability. 5: Unlawful Recruitment and Use of Children: From Proscription to Prevention. 6: Rights, Wrongs, and Transitional Reconstruction. 7: Reinvigorating the International Legal Imagination. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; ICCPR; |
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8. | Olasolo, Hector : Essays on international criminal justice, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Essays on international criminal justice / Olasolo, Hector, xlii, 213 p.. - Oxford : Hart, 2012. ISBN 978-1-84113-052-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Foreword: Law in the Twenty-First Century. Luis Moreno Ocampo: Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court. Preliminary Reflections: The Preventative Role of the International Criminal Court. 1: The Role of the International Criminal Court in Preventing Atrocity Crimes through Timely Intervention. 2: The Admissibility of ‘Situations’. 3: The Admissibility Analysis of the ‘Situation’ in the Republic of Kenya before the International Criminal Court. 4: The Distinction Between Situations and Cases in National Laws of Cooperation with the ICC. 5: Complementarity Analysis of National Sentencing. 6: The Application of Indirect Perpetration through Organised Structures of Power at the International Level. 7: Shedding Some Light on the Nature of the Notion of Joint Criminal Enterprise and its Extended Form. 8: Victims’ Participation According to the Jurisprudence of the International Criminal Court. 9: Legal Clinics in Continental Western Europe: The Approach of the Utrecht Legal Clinic. Epilogue: Building the Proceedings before the Pre-Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Court. Judge Sylvia H Steiner, Judge and President of the Pre-Trial Division of the International Criminal Court. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Colombia / England / France / germany / Spain / Switzerland / USA NOTE (GENERAL): ICC statute; ECHR; ICCPR; AMR;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841130521 |
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9. | Badescu, Cristina Gabriela : Humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect : security and human rights / Badescu, Cristina Gabriela - (Global politics and the responsibility to protect), xi, 212 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN O978-0-415-53244-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction: Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect. PART 1: R2P’s Theoretical Weight:. 2. The Responsibility to Protect: Sovereignty and Human Rights. 3. Who Authorizes Interventions?. 4. Who Conducts Interventions?. PART 2: R2P’s Practical Dimensions:. 5. From Concept to Norm. 6. From Normative Development to Implementation. 7. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Canada / Chad / China / Darfur / East Timor / Georgia / Haiti / Iraq / Kenya / Liberia / Burma / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / Sudan / USA / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-chap.VII; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; CAT; |
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10. | Heikkilä, Mikaela : Coping with international atrocities through criminal law , 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Coping with international atrocities through criminal law : a study into the typical features of international criminality and the reflection of these traits in international criminal law / Heikkilä, Mikaela, 420 p.. - Åbo/Turku : Åbo Akademi U. P., 2013. ISBN 978-951-765-702-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. PART I: THE SOCIAL PROBLEM THAT INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AIMS AT ADDRESSING:. 2. The phenomenology of international criminality. 3. Criminology and international crimes. PART II: THE INSTRUMENT:. 4. The basic features of criminal law. 5. The special features of international criminal law. PART III: THE LEGAL SOLUTIONS:. 6. The international crimes. 7. Participation and responsibility. 8. Averting criminal responsibility. 9. Sentencing. 10. Concluding analysis. SVENSKT SAMMANDRAG. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): PhD in public international law, ÅAU. Department of law, 2013, [T] NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; ICC statute; CAT; Nuremberg charter; Tokyo charter; ICTY charter; ICTR charter; ICC statute; Statute for the Special Tribunal for Lebanon; |
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11. | Gill, Terry D. (gen. ed.) : Yearbook of international humanitarian law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Yearbook of international humanitarian law : 2012 : volume 15 / Gill, Terry D. (gen. ed.), viii, 256 p.. - Hague : Asser Press, 2014. ISBN 978-90-6704-923-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: The Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare:. 1. The Tallinn Manual and International Cyber Security Law, by Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg. 2. The Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare: A Commentary on Chapter II—The Use of Force, by Nicholas Tsagourias. 3. Law in the Virtual Battlespace: The Tallin Manual and the Jus in Bello, by Rain Liivoja and Tim McCormack. PART II: Child Soldiers and the Lubanga case :. 4. Between Consolidation and Innovation: The International Criminal Court’s Trial Chamber Judgment in the Lubanga Case, by Sylvain Vité. 5. The Effects of the Lubanga Case on Understanding and Preventing Child Soldiering, by Mark A. Drumbl. 6. Sexual Violence Against Children on the Battlefield as a Crime of Using Child Soldiers: Square Pegs in Round Holes and Missed Opportunities in Lubanga, by Joe Tan. PART III: Other Articles:. 7. The Duty to Investigate Civilian Casualties During Armed Conflict and Its Implementation in Practice, by Alon Margalit. 8 Year in Review 2012, by Christophe Paulussen and Jessica Dorsey. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Bangladesh / Bosnia and Herzegovina / Denmark / Israel / Kosovo / Netherlands / Serbia / United Kingdom NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ACHPR; AMR; CRC; CRC-OP; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR;
URL http://www.asser.nl/publications.aspx?site_id=28&level1=14485&id=12778 |
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12. | Kuwali, Dan (ed.) : By all means necessary, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph By all means necessary : protecting civilians and preventing mass atrocities in Africa / Kuwali, Dan (ed.) ; Viljoen, Frans (ed.), 495 p. - Pretoria : Pretoria University Law Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-920538-66-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: IMPLEMENTATION OF PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS MANDATES. 1. Dan Kuwali and Frans Viljoen: Introduction. 2. Dan Kuwali: Article 4(h), the responsibility to protect and the protection of civilians. 3. Conor Foley: Defining protection of civilians in the context of armed conflicts. 4. Dire Tladi: Interpretation of protection of civilians mandates in United Nations Security Council Resolutions. PART II: PROTECTION OF SPECIFIC POPULATIONS AND PROPERTY AT RISK. 5. Thompson Chengeta: Protection of civilians from wilful killing in armed conflicts. 6. Dan Kuwali: Prevention of violent extremism in Africa. 7. Cephas Lumina: Protection of children in armed conflicts. 8. Cristiano d'Orsi: Protection of refugees and internally displaced persons during armed conflicts. 9. Dan Kuwali, Catherine Nakirya and Grace Amuge: Protection from sexual and gender-based violence in Africa. 10. Dan Kuwali and Gudmundur Alfredsson: Protection of minorities. 11. Jan F. Mutton: Protection of cultural heritage during armed conflicts in Africa. PART III: MEANS AND STRATEGIES FOR DEALING WITH MASS ATROCITIES. 12. Anna Larsson and Dan Kuwali: The role of humanitarian agencies in the protection of civilians. 13. Thomas Probert: The role of the UN Human Rights Council Special Procedures in protecting the right to life in armed conflicts. 14. John-Mark Iyi: The role of courts in protection of civilians. 15. Mphatso Boti-Phiri: Conflict prevention, peace building and prevention of mass atrocities. 16. Neville Dastoor and Dan Kuwali: The role of the United Nations Security Council in protection of civilians. PART IV: LESSONS LEARNT IN PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICTS. 17. Buba Bojang: Protection of civilians in armed conflicts in West Africa. 18. Bright Nkrumah and Godard Busingye: No peace, no war: protection of civilians in the Great Lakes Region in Africa. 19. Paul Phiri: Protection of civilians in the Horn of Africa. 20. Joe Stork: Protection of civilians: experiences from the Middle East and North Africa. 21. Solomon Dersso: The African Union's agenda on the protection of civilians: a review of its ambition and practice. 22. Noel M. Morada: Asian perspectives on atrocity prevention and protection of civilians PART V: THE FUTURE OF PROTECTING CIVILIANS AND PREVENTING MASS ATROCITIES IN AFRICA. 23. Gilbert Mittawa: Overcoming challenges in protecting civilians. 24. Dan Kuwali: The future of protection of civilians in Africa. 25. Dan Kuwali and Frans Viljoen: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): Colloquim on the protection of civilians in armed conflicts, Pretoria, 18 and 19 September 2014 NOTE (GENERAL): Constitutive Act of the African Union |
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13. | van der Wilt, Harmen (ed.) : Legal responses to transnational and international crimes, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Legal responses to transnational and international crimes : towards an integrative approach / van der Wilt, Harmen (ed.) ; Paulussen, Christophe (ed.), 322 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017. ISBN 978-1-78643-398-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Harmen van der Wilt: Legal responses to transnational and international crimes: towards a integrative approach?. 2. Neil Boister: Responding to transnational crime: the distinguishing features of transnational criminal law. 3. Héctor Olásolo: Is international criminal law an appropriate mechanism to deal with organised crime in a global society?. 4. Marta Bo: Piracy at the intersection between international and national: regional enforcement of a transnational crime. 5. Inez Braber: Terrorism as a new generation transnational crime: prosecuting terrorism at the International Criminal Court. 6. Alejandro Chehtman: Terrorism and the conceptual divide between international and transnational criminal law. 7. Ilias Bantekas: Cybercrime and its sovereign spaces: an international law perspective. 8. Nicolò Bussolati: Domestic and international legal approaches to the repression of politically motivated cyber-attacks. 9. Giulio Nessi: Transnational prosecution of grand corruption and its discontent. 10. Dirk van Leeuwen: Prosecuting money laundering at the ICC: can it stop the funding of international criminal organisations?. 11. Maria Laura Ferioli: Safeguarding defendants' rights in transnational and international cooperation. 12. Sabine Gless: Ne bis in idem in an international and transnational criminal justice perspective: paving the way for an individual right?. 13. Sander Wirken and Hanna Bosdriesz: Privatisation and increasing complexity of mass violence in Mexico and Central America: exploring appropriate international responses. 14. Charles Chernor Jalloh: The distinction between 'international' and 'transnational' crimes in the African Criminal Court. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Guatemala / Mexico |