1. | Case of Zimmermann and Steiner: judgment of 13th July 1983., 1983 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Case of Zimmermann and Steiner: judgment of 13th July 1983. / - (Publications of the European Court of Human Rights.Series A : Judgments and decisions ; No. 66), 15 p.. - Köln : Carl Heymann, 1983. ISBN 3 452 19679 8 LANGUAGE: ENG, FRE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Switzerland : 8247 NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-6(1)-50 LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR |
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2. | Om mänskliga rättigheter i Sverige, 1986 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Om mänskliga rättigheter i Sverige : eller en stillsam betraktelse även punkt VII i Helsingforsdekalogen / ; Sundberg, Jacob REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Svensk juristtidning, p. 653-694. - Stockholm : Sveriges Advokatsamfund, 1986. - ISSN 0339-6591 LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden : 8246 NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; |
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3. | Cohen-Jonathan, Gérard : De l'effet juridique des "measures provisoires" dans certaines circonstances et de l'efficacité du droit de recours individuel, 1991 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial De l'effet juridique des "measures provisoires" dans certaines circonstances et de l'efficacité du droit de recours individuel : a' propos de l'arrét Cruz Varas de la cour EDH / Cohen-Jonathan, Gérard REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Revue universelle des droits de l'homme - RUDH : 3(6)., p. 205-209. - Kehl am Rhein : Editions N.P. Engel, 1991. - ISSN 0937-714X LANGUAGE: FRE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden : 8246 NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-3-8-25 |
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4. | Marcus-Helmous, Silvio : The place of the convention in European integration, 1993 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a monograph The place of the convention in European integration / Marcus-Helmous, Silvio - (All- European human rights yearbook (=AEHRYB) ; vol. 2), p. 183-194. - Kehl am Rhein : N.P. Engel, 1993. ISBN 3-88357-111-3 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): Proceedings of the seminar held in Leiden, (19911024-19911026), (C) NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ESC; Lomé conventions; |
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5. | Varennes, Fernand de : Language and freedom of expression in international law, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Language and freedom of expression in international law / Varennes, Fernand de REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : a comparative and international journal of the social sciences, humanities and law : vol. 16; no. 1., p. 163-186. - Baltimore, Maryland : John Hopkins U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ECHR; |
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6. | O'Flaherty, Michael : The reporting obligation under article 40 of the international covenant on civil and political rights, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The reporting obligation under article 40 of the international covenant on civil and political rights : lessons to be learned from consideration by the Human Rights Committee of Ireland's first report / O'Flaherty, Michael REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : a comparative and international journal of the social sciences, humanities and law : vol. 16; no. 3., p. 515-538. - Baltimore, Maryland : John Hopkins U. P., 1994. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Ireland NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR-40; ECHR; ESC; |
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7. | Consideration of reports submitted by states parties under article 40 of the covenant, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: collection Consideration of reports submitted by states parties under article 40 of the covenant : comments of the Human Rights Committee : United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland /, 5 p.. - New York : United Nations, 1995. LANGUAGE: ENG DOCUMENT SYMBOL: CCPR/C/79/Add.55 INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR-40 LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: UN |
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8. | Del Valle, Sandra : Language rights and the law in the United States, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Language rights and the law in the United States : 'finding our voices' / Del Valle, Sandra - (Bilingual education and bilingualism ; 40), xiii, 357 p.. - Clevedon : Multilingual Matters LTD, 2003. ISBN 1-85359-658-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. A history of language rights - between tolerance and hostility. 2. Nativism and language restrictions - echoes of the past at the end of the 20th century. 3. Fulfilling the promise of citizenship - English literacy, naturalization and voting rights. 4. Language rights in the workplace - negotiating boundaries within close spaces . 5. Language rights in litigation - making the case for greater protections in criminal and civil proceedings. 6. Bilingual education - learning and politics in the classroom. 7. Native American education - the US implements an English-only policy. 8. Due Process and Governmental Benefits: When English-Only is Enough. 9. Coomerce and Language Minorities: Remaking Old Laws for New Consumers. 10. The place of international law in promoting linguistic human rights within the United States. - INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA |
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9. | Falcon Y Tella, Maria José : Civil disobedience [T], 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Civil disobedience [T] / Falcon Y Tella, Maria José - (The Erik Castrén Institute monographs oninternational law and human rights ; vol. 7), xxviii, 487 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2004. ISBN 90-04-14121-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: Preface by the Series Editor; Introduction; 1. Justification for the Study of the Subject of Civil Disobedience within Legal Philosophy; 2. Methodology of the Work: Between Dualism and the Threedimensional; 3. The Question of Terminology: Different Meanings of the Term “Civil Disobedience”; I. The Concept of Civil Disobedience. I. : THE CONCEPT OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: CHApTER 1. The Positive Aspect; 1. The Polemic Surrounding Formal Requirements; “Formal” and “Flexible” Definition of Civil Disobedience; 1.1. The Plane of Values: The “What-For” of Civil Disobedience as an Act of Legitimative Pretensions; 1.1.1. The Conscious and Intentional Nature of Civil Disobedience; 1.1.2. The Appeal to Ethical Principles in Civil Disobedience; 1.2. The Plane of Norms: Those Against Which Civil Disobedience is Directed. Civil Disobedience Between Dissent and Consensus; 1.2.1. Dissent: Civil Disobedience as an Illegal Act; 1.2.2. Consensus: Civil Disobedience as an Act within the Democratic System; 1.3. The Plane of Facts: The “How” of Civil Disobedience; Civil Disobedience as a Civic Political Act Seeking Efficacy; The Means Employed in Civil Disobedience; 1.3.1. Civil Disobedience as a Collective Act; 1.3.2. Civil Disobedience as a Public Act; 1.3.3. Civil Disobedience as, in Principle, a Non-Violent Act; 1.3.4. The Organised and Deliberate Nature of Civil Disobedience; 2. Ends Pursued: The “For What” of Civil Disobedience; 2.1. The Plane of Values: Symbolic and Educational Ends of Civil Disobedience; 2.2. The Plane of Norms: Innovative Ends of Civil Disobedience; 2.3. The Plane of Facts: Stabilising Goals of Civil Disobedience; CHAPTER 2. Negative Aspect; Definition Vis-à-Vis Related Phenomena; 1. Phenomena Traditionally Compared with Civil Disobedience; 1.1. Civil Disobedience and Conscientious Objection; Draft-Dodging as Indirect Civil Disobedience to the Law Governing Conscientious Objection; 1.2. Civil Disobedience and Resistance; Levels of Resistance; 1.2.1. Non-Resistance; 1.2.2. Passive Resistance; 1.2.3. Active Resistance; 1.2.4. The Right to Resist; 1.3. Civil and Criminal Disobedience; Justified Criminality; Political Crime; 1.4. Civil Disobedience and Revolution; 2. Other Phenomena Related to Civil Disobedience; 2.1. Civil Disobedience and Terrorism; 2.2. Civil Disobedience and the Strike. The Political General Strike. The Hunger Strike; 2.3. Civil Disobedience and Test Cases; 2.4. Civil Disobedience and Tyrannicide; 2.5. Civil Disobedience and Symbolic Acts; 2.6. Civil Disobedience and Treason; 2.7. Civil Disobedience and War, in Its Various Guises; 2.7.1. General Observations on War; Possible Justifications for War; 2.7.2. Civil Disobedience and the “Just War”; 2.7.3. Civil Disobedience and Religious Wars: The Crusades and the “Holy War”; 2.7.4. Present-Day War: Total and Atomic War; 2.8. Civil Disobedience and Self-Guardianship in Private Law; 2.9. Civil Disobedience and “Copping-Out”; 2.10. Distinct Types of Disobedience by Acting Subject; Dutiful Obedience; 2.10.1. Military Disobedience; 2.10.2. Ecclesiastical Disobedience; 2.10.3. Administrative Disobedience; Civil Servant Disobedience; 2.11. Dissent; 2.12. Militant Action; 2.13. Social Protest; 2.14. Non-Cooperation; 2.15. Non-Peaceful Disobedience: Rebellion, Sedition and Guerrilla Warfare; 2.16. Civil Disobedience and the Right to Asylum; II. THE JUSTIFICATION OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: The Positive Aspect; Dialectic of Legitimacy, Validity and Effectiveness Applied to the Subject of Civil Disobedience; 1. The Plane of Values; The Moral Justification for Civil Disobedience: “The Individual’s Moral Duty to Disobey”; The Main Theories Concerning Moral Obligation; 1.1. Iusnaturalism: The Appeal to a Higher Law and the Subsuming of Civil Disobedience under Natural and Human Rights Theories; 1.2. Moral Relativism: The Appeal to Individual Conscience; The Spanish Polemic Begun by González Vicén and Elías Díaz; 1.3. Utilitarianism: The Appeal to the Common Good; Critiques of Utilitarian Theories; 2. The Plane of Norms. Legal Excuses for Civil Disobedience; Does “A Subjective Right of the Individual to Civil Disobedience” Exist?; 2.1. The Anglo-American Answer and Its Applicability to Spanish Law; Distinct Mechanisms According to the Actor or Subject Employing Them; 2.1.1. When the Actor is the Lawyer; Main “Defences”; 2.1.2. When the Actor is the Jury; “Jury Nullification”, as an Expression of “Freedom of the Jury”; 2.1.3. When the Actor is the Prosecutor; “Prosecutorial Discretion” as a Type of “Official iscretion”; 2.1.4. The Civil Disobedient’s Role as Defendant in the Trial; 2.1.5. The Judge’s Role in the Treatment of Civil Disobedience; The “Political Question Doctrine”; 2.2. An Attempt at Taking a Personal Position, and Conclusions Concerning the Possible Existence of a Subjective Right to Civil Disobedience within the Spanish Legal System; 2.2.1. Antinomy of Values; 2.2.2. Antinomy of Powers; 2.2.3. Antinomy of Norms; 2.2.4. The Possible Nature of a Right to Civil Disobedience. III. THE PLANE OF FACTS: Political and Social Explanation of Civil Disobedience; The “Individual Political Obligation to Obey”; 3.1. Political Obligation as a Prima Facie Obligation; 3.2. Theory Types; 3.2.1. Consensual Democratic Theories, Acceptance and Popular Representation; The Majority Rule; Fair Play Obligation; Form of Government under Which Civil Disobedience Develops; 3.2.2. Coercive as opposed to Recognition Theories; 3.2.3. Mixed Theories; Chapter 2. Negative Aspects: The Limits of Civil Disobedience; INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www.brill.nl/m_catalogue_search.asp?sub=6&converted_subtitle=inete&subtitle=inete&x=13&y=10 |
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10. | Princen, Sebastiaan : EC compliance with WTO law, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial EC compliance with WTO law : the interplay of law and politics / Princen, Sebastiaan REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law : vol. 15; no. 3., p. 555-574. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2004. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/ejilaw/current/chh304.sgm.abs.html (full text) |
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11. | Thieme, Dominick : European Community external relations in the field of environment, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial European Community external relations in the field of environment / Thieme, Dominick REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European environmental law review : vol. 10; no. 8/9., p. 252-263. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2001. - ISSN 0966-1646 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Biodiversity convention; Framework convention on climate change; LIBRARY LOCATION: Miljörätt |
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12. | Loucaides, Loukis G. : The protection of the right to property in occupied territories, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The protection of the right to property in occupied territories / Loucaides, Loukis G. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International and comparative law quarterly : vol. 53; part 3., p. 677-691. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2004. - ISSN 0020-5893 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Cyprus / Turkey / Germany NOTE (GENERAL): Hague convention (1907); The ICTY statute; The statute of the ICC; ECHR; |
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13. | Woods, Jeanne : Human rights and the global marketplace, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and the global marketplace : economic, social and cultural dimensions / Woods, Jeanne ; Lewis, Hope, xxxiii, 959 p.. - Ardsley, NY : Transnational publ., 2005. ISBN 1-57105-274-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE GLOBAL MARKETPLACE : DISCURSIVE THEMES:. PART II: INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS AND THEIR IMPLEMENTATION. PART III: POWER, POLITICS, AND POVERTY: STRUCTURAL CHALLENGES TO THE REALIZATION OF ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS. PART IV: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Africa / Asia / Brazil / Canada / China / India / Iraq / Israel / Jamaica / Mexico / Nigeria / Pakistan / South Africa / USA NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CERD; CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; ECHR-14; Declaration on the right to development; ICESCR; EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR; Genocide convention; ICCPR; Limburg principles; Migrant workers convention;
URL http://www.transnationalpubs.com/showbook.cfm?bookid=10277&userid=96254821 |
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14. | Eden, Paul (ed.) : September 11, 2001, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph September 11, 2001 : a turning point in international law and domestic law? / Eden, Paul (ed.) ; O'Donnell, Therese, xxiv, 856 p.. - Ardsley, NY : Transnational publ., 2005. ISBN 1-57105-326-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Foreword / Harry Rajak. PART I - September 11, 2001 : a turning point?:. Ch. 1. Introduction / Paul Eden and Therese O'Donnell Ch. 2. Ends and means in politics : international law as framework for political decisionmaking / Sibylle Kapferer. Ch. 3. International law and 9/11 - a comment / Philippe Sands. PART II - LEGITIMACY AND THE USE OF FORCE IN RESPONSE TO TERRORISM:. Ch. 4. A new war for a new century? : the use of force against terrorism after September 11, 2001 / Christine Gray -- Ch. 5. Risk-transfer militarism and the legitimacy of war after Iraq / Martin Shaw -- Ch. 6. Legitimacy and the use of force in response to terrorism - a comment / Simon Chesterman. PART III - THE CONCEPT OF TERRORISM AND RESPONSE TO GLOBAL TERRORISM:. Ch. 7. The concept of terrorism and responses to global terrorism : coming to terms with the empty sky / Christopher Harding. Ch. 8. The problem of the definition of terrorism in international law / John Dugard. Ch. 9. The war on terror and U.N. attempts to adopt a comprehensive convention on international terrorism / Surya P. Subedi. PART IV: MILITARY TRIBUNALS AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW:. Ch. 10. Al Qaeda, military commissions and American self-defense / Ruth Wedgwood. Ch. 11. From Guantanamo Bay to Abu Ghraib : the applicability of international human rights law to the post-9/11 extraterritorial activities of states / Ralph Wilde. Ch. 12. The detention of Al Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo Bay : U.K. perspectives / Matthew Happold. Ch. 13. Human rights and hegemony in the war against terror / Emily Haslam. PART V: EUROPEAN AND JAPANESE RESPONSES TO SEPTEMBER 11:. Ch. 14. The European Union and the challenge of September 11, 2001 : potential and limits of a "new" actor in the fight against international terrorism / Jorg Monar. Ch. 15. Renouncing peace in a time of war - Japan's constitutional conundrum / Meryll Dean. Ch. 16. European and Japanese responses to September 11 - a comment / Hans G. Nilsson. PART VI - DOMESTIC RESPONSES - RREFUGEES, ASYLUM SEEKERS AND HUMAN RIGHTS:. Ch. 17. The rule of law in times of trouble : asylum, national security and human rights / Colin Harvey -- Ch. 18. Shifting the focus of U.S. law from liberty to security / Dinah Shelton -- Ch. 19. The Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 : the "response" of Great Britain's legal order to September 11, 2001 : conflicts with fundamental rights / Helen Fenwick. PART VII - INTERNATIONAL LAW IN THE LIGHT OF THE EVENTS of SEPTEMBER 11:. Ch. 20. Security Council Resolution 1373 and the constitution of the United Nations / Matthew Happold. Ch. 21. International measures to prevent and suppress the financing of terrorism / Paul Eden. Ch. 22. Iraqi sanctions, human rights and the U.N. Security Council / Therese O'Donnell. Ch. 23. Dual containment : the United States, Iraq and the U.N. Security Council / Simon Chesterman and Sebastian von Einsiedel. Ch. 24. Raising global counter-terrorism capacity : the work of the Security Council's counter-terrorism committee / Eric Donnelly. Ch. 25. 9/11 : a turning point or a tipping point? / Dominic McGoldrick. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; AMR-27; ECHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties;
URL http://www.transnationalpubs.com/showbook.cfm?bookid=10279&userid=13783960 |
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15. | Lester, Antony : The human rights act 1998 - five years on, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The human rights act 1998 - five years on / Lester, Antony REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European human rights law review : issue 3., p. 258-271. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2004. - ISSN 1361-1526 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-10; |
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16. | Plessis, Max du : Developing the common law progressively - horizontally, the human rights act and the South African experience, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Developing the common law progressively - horizontally, the human rights act and the South African experience / Plessis, Max du ; Ford, Jolyon REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European human rights law review : issue 3., p. 286-313. - London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2004. - ISSN 1361-1526 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: South Africa / United Kingdom NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; |
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17. | Emerton, Robyn ...[et al.] : International women's human rights [Women's human rights : leading international and national cases], 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International women's human rights [Women's human rights : leading international and national cases] / Emerton, Robyn ...[et al.], xcvii, 779 p.. - London : Cavendish publ., 2005. ISBN 1-85941-906-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. A: Use of International Norms by National Courts. B: State Responsibility Under International Law for Violations of the Human Rights of Women. C: Concepts of Discrimination. D: Rights Relating to Marriage. E: Rights as a Member of a Minority. F. Rights to respect for Family Life. G. Reproductive Rights. H. Right to Equality and Non-Discrimination in Employment. I: Right to Equality in the Enjoyment of Other. Economic and Social Rights and Access to Economic Resources. J. Equality and Non-Discrimination in Religion. To Citizenship, nationality and Immigration. K. Right not to be subjected to violence. INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www.cavendishpublishing.com/html/moreinfo.asp?BookID=533&catid= |
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18. | Bekou, Olympia : The international criminal court, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The international criminal court / Bekou, Olympia ; Cryer, Robert - (The library of essays in international law), xxv, 524 p.. - Aldershot : Ashgate publ., 2004. ISBN 0-7546-2409-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I : The International Criminal Court:. 1. Philippe Kirsch and John T. Holmes (1998), The birth of the International Criminal Court: the 1998 Rome conference. 2. Antonio Cassese (1999), The statute of the International Criminal Court: some preliminary reflections. 3. William A. Schabas (2001), The International Criminal Court: the secret of its success. PART II : The Substantive Law of the International Criminal Court:. 4. William A. Schabas (2001) : The Jelisic case and the Mens Rea of the crime of genocide. 5. Otto Triffterer (2001) : Genocide: its particular intent to destroy in whole or in part the group as such. 6. Darryl Robinson (1999) : Defining "Crimes against Humanity" at the Rome conference. 7. Thomas Graditzky (1999) : War crime issues before the Rome diplomatic conference on the establishment of an International criminal court. 8. Kai Ambos (1999) : General principles of criminal law in the Rome statute. 9. Charles Garraway (1999): Superior orders and the International Criminal Court: justice delivered or justice denied. PART III : Jurisdiction And Admissibility:. 10. Hans-Peter Kaul and Claus Kreß (1999): Jurisdiction and cooperation in the statute of the International Criminal Court: principles and compromises. 11. Dapo Akande (2003): The jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court over nationals of non-parties: legal basis and limits. 12. John T. Holmes (2002):. Complementarity: National courts versus the ICC. PART IV: OPERATION OF THE COURT:. 13. Göran Sluiter (2003) : The surrender of war criminals to the International Criminal Court. 14. Steffen Wirth (2001): Immunities, related problems, and Article 98 of the Rome statute. 15. Morten Bergsmo (2000): Occasional remarks on certain State concerns about the jurisdictional reach of the International Criminal Court, and their possible implications for the relationship between the Court and the Security Council. 16. Silvia A. Fernández de Gurmendi and Håkan Friman (2000): The rules of procedure and evidence of the International Criminal Court. PART V: PERSPECTIVES ON THE FUTURE:. 17. Michael P. Scharf (1999): The amnesty exception to the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court. 18. John R. Bolton (2000-2001): The risks and the weaknesses of the International Criminal Court from America's perspective. 19. David P. Forsythe (2002). The United States and international criminal justice . 20. Robert Cryer and Nigel D. White (2002): The Security Council and the International Criminal Court: who's feeling threatened?; Name index. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): The statute of the ICC;
URL https://www.ashgate.com/shopping/title.asp?key1=&key2=&orig=results&isbn=0%207546%202409%209 |
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19. | Niemi-Kiesiläinen, Johanna : Rikos-prosessi ja parisuhdeväkivalta, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Rikos-prosessi ja parisuhdeväkivalta / Niemi-Kiesiläinen, Johanna, 439 p.. - Helsinki : WSOY, 2004. ISBN 951-0-30002-0 LANGUAGE: FIN ABSTRACT: Teos vastaa mm. seuraaviin kysymyksiin:. * Milloin voidaan käyttää lähestymiskieltoa, mitä muutoksia tulee uuden lainsäädännön myötä?. * Mitä oikeuksia parisuhdeväkivallan uhrilla tai asianomistajalla on?. * Miten uhria, asianomistajaa tai todistajaa voidaan suojella?. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland / Sweden / USA NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ECHR;
URL http://www.wsoy.fi/pro/index.jsp?c=product&isbn=951-0-30002-0 |
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20. | Mullally, Siobhan : Gendered citizenship, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Gendered citizenship : debating reproductive rights in Ireland / Mullally, Siobhan REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : vol. 27; no. 1., p. 78-104. - Baltimore, MA : John Hopkins U. P., 2005. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; CEDAW; CRC;
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/toc/hrq27.1.html (full text) |
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21. | Special theme : African Union, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Special theme : African Union = Theme special : Union Africaine / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: African yearbook of international law; vol. 11 : 2003 / Yusuf, A. A. (gen.ed.), p. 3-162. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2005. ISBN 90-04-14362-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: THE ARTICLES ARE:. 1. The Right of Intervention by the African Union: A New Paradigm in Regional Enforcement Action?, by Abdulqawi A. Yusuf. 2. Mise hors-la-loi ou mise en quarantaine des gouvernements anticonstitutionnels par l’Union Africaine, by Sayeman Bula-Bula. 3. The Establishment of an African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights: A Judicial Première for the African Union, by Fatsah Ouguergouz. 4. The African Union Takes a Legal Stand on Corruption, by Mpazi Sinjela. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-53-54; OAU charter; AU charter; Hague conventions; Additonal protocols to the Geneva conventions; UN charter-chapter VII; ACHPR-OP; OAU refugee convention; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; |
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22. | Lawson, Anna (ed.) : Disability rights in Europe, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Disability rights in Europe : from theory to practice / Lawson, Anna (ed.) ; Gooding, Caroline, xxxv, 323 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2005. ISBN 1-84113-486-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. PART I: PRELIMINARY. PART II : HUMAN RIGHTS. PART III : ANTI-DISRIMINATION LAWS. PART IV: ACHIEVING EQUALITY THROUGH LAW? INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Austria / Belgium / Bolivia / Brazil / Canada / Chile / China / Costa Rica / Czech Republic / Ehiopia / Fiji / Finland / france / Gambia / Germany / Ghana / Guatemala / Hong Kong / Hungary / India / Ireland / israel / Korea / Luxembourg / Madagascar / Malawi / Malta / Mauritius / Namibia / Netherlands / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Norway / Panama / Philippines / Portugal / South Africa / Spain / Sri Lanka / Switzerland / Uganda / United Kingdom / USA / zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): Social charter; ESC; EC treaty; Equal treatment directive; ECHR; ICCPR-19; ICESCR-12; UN charter; CRC-28-29; UDHR-5-25-63; |
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23. | Ashworth, Andrew : Human rights, serious crime, and criminal procedure, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights, serious crime, and criminal procedure : Hamlyn lectures / Ashworth, Andrew, xx, 145 p.. - London : Sweet & Maxwell; The Hamlyn Trust, 2005. ISBN 0-421-78300-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Contents include: I. Why Bother With Rights When Public Safety is at Risk?:. introduction; the value of accuracy; process values and legitimacy; exploring procedural fairness; conflicting goals, conflicting pressures. II. The Strasbourg Court and the British Response to Strasbourg: the early years; public safety and Article 6; British courts and the public interest; the strength of ""public interest"" arguments; human rights and the critics. III. Taking a Balanced View of the ""Public Interest"": greater safeguards for serious crime; developing a human rights culture; no rights without responsibilities; rights and risk; avoiding human rights; war, fights and the relegation of human rights. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR; |
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24. | Dekker, Ige F. (ed.) : Governance and international legal theory, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Governance and international legal theory / Dekker, Ige F. (ed.) ; Werner, Wouter G. - (Nova et vetera iuris gentium : Series A : Modern international law ; no. 23), xxii, 380 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2004. ISBN 90-04-14033-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction, Ige F. Dekker & Wouter G. Werner. Part One : Methodology:. Chapter 1. The Neomedieval Renaissance: Global Governance and International Law in the New Middle Ages , by Jörg Friedrichs. Chapter 2: Lawyers and Anthropologists: A Legal Pluralist Approach to Global Governance, by Gerhard Anders. Chapter 3: From Territoriality to Functionality? Towards a Legal Methodology of Globalization, by Andreas L. Paulus. Chapter 4: The Will of the International Community as a Normative Source of International Law, by Nicholas Tsagourias. Part Two: State Sovereignty:. Chapter 5: State Sovereignty and International Legal Discourse, by Wouter G. Werner. Chapter 6, Globalization and the International Criminal Court: Accountability and a New Conception of State, by Rod Jensen. Chapter 7: The International Criminal Court and the Sovereign State, by Diane Marie Amann. Part Three : International Organization:. Chapter 8 : Governance by International Organizations: Rethinking the Normative Force of International Decisions, by Ige F. Dekker & Ramses A. Wessel. Chapter 9: International Judicial Bodies as Sources of Normativity: The WTO Dispute Settlement in Comparative Context, by Tomer Broude. Chapter 10, The European Court of Justice and Legal Pluralism: The Case Law on the “Four Freedoms” and the Pluralist Construction of the Legal System of the European Community, by Herman Voogsgeerd. Part Four : Non-Governmental Organizations:. Chapter 11: Non-State Actors: Undermining or Increasing the Legitimacy and Transparency of International Environmental Law, by Joyeeta Gupta. Chapter 12 : NGOs, the International Criminal Court, and the Politics of Writing International Law, by Michael J. Struett. Chapter 13: Balancing Norms in Cyberspace: State and Non-State Actor Normativity in Cyberspace, by J.P. Mifsud Bonnici & C.N.J. de Vey Mestdagh. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; |
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25. | Gerards, Janneke H. : Judicial review in equal treatment cases, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Judicial review in equal treatment cases / Gerards, Janneke H. - ( International studies in human rights ; vol. 83), xvi, 768 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2005. ISBN 90-04-14379-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Chapter 1 : General Introduction: The Need for a General Decision Model. Chapter 2: A Theoretical Model for Judicial Decision-making on the Principle of Equality. Chapter 3 : Assessment Against Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights by the European Court of Human Rights. Chapter 4: Assessment by the European Court of Justice against the Principle of Equality. Chapter 5 : Assessment Against the Equal Protection Clause by the Supreme Court Chapter 6 : Assessment Against the Principle of Equality in the Netherlands. Chapter 7: Conclusion: Towards a General Assessment Model. Appendices. Case Law, Bibliography. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / Netherlands NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ECHRP-12; ICCPR-26; EC-treaty; |
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26. | Ziemele, Ineta (ed.) : Expanding the horizons of human rights law, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Expanding the horizons of human rights law : new authors, new themes / Ziemele, Ineta (ed.) - (The Raoul Wallenberg Institute : new authors series ; vol. 1), xii, 290 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2005. ISBN 90-04-14364-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents :. INETA ZIEMELE: Introduction; 1. FILIPA MARQUES JÚNIOR : Fair Trial in Death Penalty Cases: A Case Study on the New Military Commissions in the USA. 2. DOMINIC LAFERRIÈRE Fighting Terrorism and Respecting Human Rights, a Case Study of International Human Rights Jurisprudence. 3. KAJSA ÖBRINK : Multiple Discrimination and the System of International Human Rights. Law: The Example of Haitian Women in the Dominican Republic. 4. ANNETTE LYTH : Where are the Women? – A Gender Approach to Refugee Law. 5. MONA RESSAISSI : Minimum Wage Regulation: An Extension to the Right to an Adequate Standard of Living. 6. MALIN KÄLL : Oil-Exploitation in Nigeria Procedures Addressing Human Rights. Abuses. 7. GEORGE JOKHADZE : The Big Ones of the Music Industry: Copyright and Human Rights Aspects of the Music Business. LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / Australia / New Zealand / Europe / Asia / Africa / Latin America NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR-26(2); ICESCR-13; CERD-7; UNESCO declaration on race and racial prejudice; CRC-29; Convention concerning discrimination in respect of employment and occupation (ILO convention no. 111); Declaration on the rights of minorities; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); Europan charter for regional or minority languages; ACHPR; ICESCR-2; Geneva conventions; ICCPR-14; |
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27. | Macklem, Patrick : Indigenous difference and the constitution of Canada, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous difference and the constitution of Canada / Macklem, Patrick, x, 334 p.. - Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8020-4195-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. CHAPTER ONE: Method:. Text, Structure, Precedent. Positivism and Distributive Justice. The Role of External Theory. Equality as an Organizing Principle. The Significance of Self-Determination. Universalism and Relativism. CHAPTER TWO: Culture:. Comprehending Culture. Aboriginal Rights as Cultural Rights. Cultural Difference and Constitutional Tradition. Downloading International Law. Cultural Difference and Equality of Resources. CHAPTER THREE : Territory:. The Legal Significance of Prior Occupancy. The Law of Aboriginal Title. The Fiction of Original Crown Occupancy. The Distribution of Title. The Constitutional Dimensions of Aboriginal Title. CHAPTER FOUR: Sovereignty:. Sovereignty's Meaning. Discovery and the Distribution of Sovereignty. Sovereignty and Formal Equality. Sovereignty and Substantive Equality. Equality and Other Cultural Groups. CHAPTER FIVE The Treaty Process:. Form and Substance in Treaty Jurisprudence. The Contractualist Vision. A New Interpretive Framework. Treaties as Constitutional Accords. Social Contracts and Distributive Justice. CHAPTER SIX: Interests, Rights, and Limitations:. Aboriginal Interests and Purposive Interpretation. Cultural and Territorial Rights. Aboriginal Rights of Self-Government. From Extinguishment to Co-Existence. Limiting Aboriginal and Treaty Rights. CHAPTER SEVEN:. Indigenous Difference and the Charter:. Aboriginal Power and the Public/Private Distinction. Distinguishing Discrimination. Indigenous Difference and Affirmative Action. Derogating from Difference. Aboriginal Membership and the Charter. CHAPTER EIGHT : Indigenous Difference and State Obligations:. Three Distinctions. Re-reading Sparrow. Fiduciary Duties of the Crown. International Legal Obligations. Justiciability Revisited. CHAPTER NINE: State Obligations and Treaty Negotiations:. Contemporary Treaty Processes. Constitutional Dictates and Institutional Design. A Duty to Negotiate in Good Faith. From Consultation to Co-Management. Negotiating Self-Government. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Genocide convention; CERD; ICCPR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; OAS charter; |
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28. | de Zwaan, Jaap W. (ed.) : The European Union, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The European Union : an ongoing process of integration : Liber Amicorum Alfred E. Kellermann / de Zwaan, Jaap W. (ed.) ; Jans, Jan H. ; Nelissen, Frans A., xix, 371 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2004. ISBN 90-6704-187-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Foreword Joseph Weiler; Alfred E. Kellermann: Academic community organiser The Editors; List of abbreviations. Part I. Institutional and Constitutional Aspects:. 1. The structure of the union according to the draft constitution for Europe, by Koen Lenaerts. 2. Rethinking the institutional system, by Tim Koopmans. 3.Disturbing or rebalancing powers within the European Union?, by Laurence Gormley. 4. The role of the European Commission over the years: changes and challenges, Jaap de Zwaan. 5. The president of the European Council: the beginning of a European government? , by Richard Lauwaars. 6. The union minister for foreign affairs: Europe’s single voice or Trojan horse?, by Jan Wouters. 7. The member states under the constitution: preliminary investigations, by Tom Eijsbouts. 8. European Union executives: out of the shade, into the sunshine?, by Deirdre Curtin. 8. The fall of committees?, by Ellen Vos. 9. Fragmentation in the governance of EU external relations: legal institutional dilemmas and the new constitution for Europe, by Ramses Wessel. 10. Future paths of flexibility: enhanced cooperation, partial agreements and pioneer groups, by Bruno de Witte. Part II. General Principles and Substantive Aspects:. 1. Use of the infringement procedure in cases of judicial errors, by Christiaan Timmermans. 2. State liability and infringements attributable to national courts: a Dutch perspective on the Köbler Case, by Jan Jans. 3. Rights v. principles, or how to remove fundamental rights from the jurisdiction of the courts, by Sacha Prechal. 4. Decentralisation in a system of legal exception: the role of national competition authorities under regulation 1/2003, by Anne-Marie Van den Bossche. 5. Internet: a new paradigm for EU law? some exploratory comments on a remarkable judgment, by Piet Jan Slot. 6. 'The ethology of a paper tiger': The European Union and doping in sport, by Robert Siekmann and Janwillem Soek. 7. The Europeanization of the international maritime safety agenda: are we better off leaving it to the IMO?, by Frans Nelissen. 8. The teaching of European and international law: the need for curriculum change, by Gerard Tanja. Part III. The New Member States and Eastern Europe:. 1. Supremacy of constitutions in the context of constitutional pluralism, by Evgeni Tanchev. 2. Constitutional preparation for EU accession in the new central and eastern European member states: is the rule of law better than the rule of politics?, by Jenö Czuczai. 3. Impact of EU accession on the national legal orders of new member states: the case of Cyprus, by Nicholas Emiliou. 4. The Czech human rights doctrine as challenged by the EU charter of fundamental rights Jiri Zemanek; European integration and Russia, by Yury Matveevsky. 5. The impact of European integration on the development of law in Russia, by Gennadi Tolstopyatenko. 7. Russia and the enlarged European Union: mending fences while shaping a wider Europe’s environment, by Wybe Douma. 8. The European Union's troubled relations with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1991–2001), by Steven Blockmans. Bibliography Alfred E. Kellermann. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Austria / Central America / Chechnya / Cyprus / Czech Republic / Estonia / Germany / Hungary / Ireland / Korea / Latvia / Liberia / Lithuania / Malta / Poland / Romania / Russian Federation / Serbia / Montenegro / Slovakia / Slovenia / USSR / Yugoslavia / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; Kyoto protocol; Laeken declaration; EU charter of fundamental rights;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9067041874 |
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29. | Townsend, Gregory : Current developments in the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Current developments in the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda / Townsend, Gregory REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International criminal law review : vol. 5; no. 1., p. 147-160. - Leiden : Brill, 2005. - ISSN 1567-536X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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30. | Olusanya, Olaoluwa : Sentencing war crimes and crimes against humanity under the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Sentencing War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Sentencing war crimes and crimes against humanity under the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Sentencing War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia / Olusanya, Olaoluwa, x, 170 p.. - Groningen : Europa Law Publishing, 2005. ISBN 90-768-7142-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Chapter 1 : Introduction. 1. Introduction. 1.1 Overall Goals. 1.2 Literature Overview. 1.3 Chapter Overview and Methodology. 1.3.1 Chapter 1: Introduction. 1.3.2 Chapter 2: Historical Impediments to the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity and Methodology. 1.3.3 Chapter 3: Impediments to the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under the ICTY and Methodology. 1.3.4 Chapters 4 and 5: Solution, Conclusion and Methodology. Chapter 2 Historical Impediments to the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity 2.1 Introduction. 2.2 World War II Tribunals. 2.2.1 The Different Interests Protected by War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity in 1945. 2.2.1.1 War Crimes. 2.2.1.2 Crimes against Humanity. 2.2.2 Factors Negating the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity Based on their Different Interests. 2.2.2.1 The Lackadaisical Attitude to the Translation of the Substantive Law on War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity into Penalties. 1 High Command Case. 2 Hostage Case. 3 Einsatzgruppen Case. 4 RuSHA Case. 2.2.2.2 The Rudimentary State of International Human Rights Law. 2.3 Conclusion. Chapter 3 : Impediments to the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under the ICTY:. 3.1 Introduction. 3.2 The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) 3.2.1 War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity as Codified under the Statute of the ICTY. 3.2.2 The Sentencing Approaches of the ICTY to War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity. 3.2.2.1 The Same Interest Approach. 1 Prosecutor v. Erdemovic (Separate and Dissenting Opinion of Judge Li). 2 Prosecutor v. Tadic (Separate Opinion of Judge Robinson). 3 Prosecutor v. Tadic (Separate Opinion of Judge Shahabuddeen). 4 Prosecutor v. Krnojelac. 5 Prosecutor v. Vasiljevic. 6 Prosecutor v. Naletilic and Martinovic Judgement. 7 Prosecutor v. Blaskic (Appeals Chamber). 8 The United Kingdom. 9 Finland. 10 Holland. 11 Canada. 12 Australia. 13 New Zealand. 3.2.2.2 Limitations of the Same Interest Approach. 1 Failure to Ensure Proportionality. 2 Lack of Transparency. 3.2.2.3 The Widespread and Systematic Attacks v. Isolated Acts Approach. 1 Prosecutor v. Kupreskic. 2 Prosecutor v. Tadic (Dissenting Opinion of Judge Cassese). 3.2.2.4 Limitations of the Widespread and Systematic Attacks v. Isolated Acts Approach. 1 Failure to Ensure Consistency. 3.2.2.5 Persecution-type v. Murder-type Approach. 1 Prosecutor v. Kupreskic. 2 Prosecutor v. Blaskic (Trial Chamber). 3.2.2.6 Limitations of the Persecution-type v. Murder-type Approach. 1 Violation of Nullum Crimen Sine Lege Principle. 3.3 Conclusion. Chapter 4 Solution to the Imposition of Relative Penalties for War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under the ICTY 4.1 Introduction . 4.2 The Discriminatory Motive v. Non-discriminatory Motive Approach 4.2.1 Step 1: Revisiting Existing Penalties for Persecution as a Crime against Humanity Offences and War Crimes Offences under the ICTY. 4.2.2 Step 2: Identification of Factors affecting the Institutionalisation of Relative Penalties for Persecution as a Crime against Humanity vis-à-vis War Crimes. 4.2.2.1 The Determination of Guilt by Association. 1 Defendants Convicted of War Crimes. 1.1 Prosecutor v. Furundzija. 1.2 Mucic (Prosecutor v. Delalic). 1.3 Landzo (Prosecutor v. Delalic). 2 Defendants Convicted on the Basis of Guilt by Association for Persecution as a Crime against Humanity. 2.1 Dosen (Prosecutor v. Sikirica et al.). 2.2 Kolundzjia (Prosecutor v. Sikirica et al.). 2.3 Zaric (Prosecutor v. Blagoje Simic et al.). 2.4 Tadic (Prosecutor v. Blagoje Simic et al.). 4.2.2.2 “Mistake of Law”. 1 Delic (Prosecutor v. Delalic). 4.2.3 Step 3: Utilizing the Results of the Analysis in Step (2) to Establish a Sentencing Tariff for Crimes against Humanity and War Crimes. 4.2.4 Step 4: Extending the Discriminatory Motive v. Nondiscriminatory Motive Approach to War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity under Domestic Law. 4.2.4.1 The United Kingdom. 4.2.4.2 Canada. 4.2.4.3 Australia. 4.2.4.4 Finland . 4.2.4.5 Other Countries. 4.3 Conclusion. Chapter 5 : Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Nuremberg charter; IMT charter; UDHR; ICCPR-14; ECHRP-7(4); ECHR-15; The ICTY statute; Geneva conventions; |