1. | Alfredsson, Gudmundur ... [et al.] : International human rights monitoring mechanisms, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series International human rights monitoring mechanisms : essays in honour of Jacob Th. Möller (part II) / Alfredsson, Gudmundur ... [et al.] - (The Raoul Wallenberg Institute human rights library ; vol. 7), p. 429-926. - Hague : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2001. ISBN 90-411-1446-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENS (cont.): 28. Men and Women, Sex and Gender, by K. Tomasevski. 29. The New Frontiers of Judicial Enforcement: The International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, by Payam. Akhavan. 30. The Role of the Permanent International Criminal Court in Prosecuting Genocide, Other Crimes against Humanity and Serious Violations of Humanitarian Law, by Christopher K. Hall. 31. The International Court of Justice in Furthering the Justiciability of Human Rights, by Jonas Grimheden. 32. The International Labour Organisation and Human Rights Access to the ILO, by Lee Swepston. 33. UNESCO, by Janusz Symonides. 34. Access to Justice: The World Bank Inspection Panel, by Laurence Boisson de Chazournes. 35. Approaching FAO, by Margret Vidar. 36. Monitoring by the Council of Europe, by Andrew Drzemczewski. 38. Inter-State Complaints Under treaty Provisions – The Experience of the European Convention on Human Rights, by Soren C. Prebensen. 38. Control of Execution of Decisions Under the ECHR – Some Remarks on the Committee of Ministers' Control of the Proper Implementation of Decisions Finding Violations of the Convention, by Fredrik G.E. Sundberg. 39. The European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, Love Kellberg. 40. The European Social Charter, by Regis Brillat. 41. Equality Between Women and Men, by Olof T. Olafsdottir. 42. Just Do It! Human Rights Education in Europe, by Maggie Nicholson. 43. The Monitoring Procedure of the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly, by Jan Kleijssen. 44. Approaching the OSCE – An Overview, by Niels Eliasson. 45. Monitoring the Human Dimension of the OSCE, by Arie Bloed. 46. The OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, by John Packer. 47. The Commissioner of the Council of the Baltic States, by Ole Espersen. 48. The EU as an External Human Rights Actor, by Allan Rosas, Barbara Brandtner. 49. Protection of Human Rights Under the Inter-American System, Michelo Hansungule. 50. The Complaint Procedures of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, by Oji Umozurike. 51. The Protection Mechanism under the African Charter and the Protocol on African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights, by Erika de Wet. 52. Prospects for Regional Human Rights Machinery in Asia-Pacific, by Jiarong Yan. 53. Human Rights and the General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Michael O'Flaherty. 54. The Human Rights Ombudsman for Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Donna Gomien. 55. Individual Complaints before the Human Rights Commission for Bosnia and Herzegovnia, by Manfred Nowak. 56. Human Rights in EU and EEA Law, b Stefan M. Stefánsson. 57. Human Rights Mechanisms in International Parliamentary Institutions, by Anders B. Johnsson. 58. The United Nations and National Human Rights Institutions, by Brian Burdekin, A. Gallagher. 59. Human Rights Education, by A.F. Jacobssen. 60. The Role of Bar Associations and Law Societies in the Implementation of Human Rights, by Ragnar Adalsteinsson. 60. On Monitoring Human Rights and The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), by Christophe Swinarski. 61. Role of NGOs – An Overview, by Rachel Brett. 62. Amnesty International: A Candle of Hope, by J.K. Eyjólfsdóttir. 63. Making a Difference, by Frances D'Souza. 64. The International Commission of Jurists in the International Human Rights Movement, by Adama Dieng. 65. La Pratique de la Fédération Internationale des Ligues des Droits de l'Homme au Sein des Organes de l'ONU, by Antoine B. de Sareluinillet. 66. Advocacy In International Organisations: Some Experiences and Reflections from the Perspective of the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF), by Aaron Rhodes. 67. Minority Rights Group, by Alan Phillips. 68. The Protestant Churches, by Bernhardur Gudmundsson. CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS. Index. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Albania / Armenia / Asia / Denmark / Australia / Austria / Belarus / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Burundi / Cambodia / Chechnya / Greece / Croatia / Czechoslovakia / East Timor / Estonia / Finland / Haiti / Germany / India / Italy / Japan / Latin America / Liberia / Malawi / Malaysia / Mauritius / Middle East / Moldova / Mongolia / Mozambique / New Zealand / Nigeria / Palestine (Gaza) / Papua New guinea / Paraguay / Peru / Philippines / Romania / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Senegal / Serbia / Slovenia / Somalia / South Africa / Spain / Switzerland / Taiwan / Tanzania / Turkey / Uganda / Ukraine / United Kingdom / USA / Uzbekistan / Viet Nam / Former Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ICCPR-14; AMR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Versailles treaty; Draft code of crimes against the peace and security of mankind; CAT; CERD; Genocide convention; ILO constitution; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); The worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182); Rio declaration; ECHRP-11; ACHPR; CRC; CEDAW-OP; Helsinki final act; Proposal on Asian convention on human rights; Arab charter on human rights; Budapest declaration; OAS charter; OAU charter; Charter of Paris; Migrant workers convention; Apartheid convention; Copenhagen document; ECPT; Turku declaration; Declaration on the protection of journalists in situations of conflict and tension; Limburg principles; Maastricht guidelines on violations of economic, social and cultural rights; |
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2. | Olsaolo, Hector : The criminal responsibility of senior political and military leaders as principals to international crimes, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The criminal responsibility of senior political and military leaders as principals to international crimes / Olsaolo, Hector - (Studies in international and comparative criminal law ; 4), xlv, 354 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2009. ISBN 978-1-84113-695-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. First Approach to the Criminal Liability of Political and Military Leaders for International Crimes. 2. Perpetration of a Crime and Participation in a Crime Committed by a Third Person: Principal versus Accessorial Liability:. I. Introduction. II. First Approach to the Problem: Principal versus Accessorial Liability in National Law. III. Principal versus Accessorial Liability in International Criminal Law. IV. Differences between the ICC and the Ad hoc Tribunals with regard to the Notion of Accessorial Liability. V. Different Approaches to the Distinction between Principal and Accessorial Liability. VI. First Approach to the Notion of Joint Criminal Enterprise as Elaborated by the Case Law of the Ad hoc Tribunals and to the Notion of Control of the Crime. VII Are the Notions of Joint Criminal Enterprise and Control of the Crime Part of Customary International Law?. 3. Direct Perpetration and Indirect Perpetration:. I. Direct Perpetration. II. Principal Liability of Senior Political and Military Leaders for Commission by Omission. III. Indirect Perpetration:. 4. Co-perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise:. I. Joint Criminal Enterprise and Joint Control as Two Competing Definitional Criteria of the Concept of Co-perpetration II. Three Forms of Co-perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise. III. Elements of Co-perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise. IV. Traditional Notion of Joint Criminal Enterprise. V. The Notion of Joint Criminal Enterprise at the Leadership Level. VI. Pleading Co-perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise. VII. Distinguishing between the Notion of Co-perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise and Aiding and Abetting as a Form of Accessorial Liability. VIII. Final Remarks on the Relationship between the Notions of Co-Perpetration Based on Joint Criminal Enterprise, Aiding and Abetting and Superior Responsibility. 5. Co-perpetration Based on Joint Control of the Crime:. I. The Notion of Joint Control of the Crime. II. The Treatment of the Notions of Joint Control of the Crime and Joint Criminal Enterprise in the Rome Statute. III. Elements of the Notion of Joint Control of the Crime. IV. Cases of Co-perpetration Based on Joint Control of the Crime versus Cases of Indirect Perpetration. V. Applications of the Notion of Co-perpetration Based on Joint Control. VI. Joint Application of the Notions of OSP and Joint Control: Indirect Co-perpetration INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Austria / Bahamas / Canada / Chile / Colombia / Denmark / Finland / Germany / France / Italy / Kenya / Malawi / Paraguay / Poland / United Kingdom / Israel / Peru / Spain / Switzerland / Yugoslavia / Zambia / USA LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Wales NOTE (GENERAL): ICC statute; Draft code of crimes against peace and security of mankind; IMT charter; Geneva conventions; Dayton agreement; Convention against illicit traffic in narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841136950 |
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3. | Osiel, Mark J. : Mass atrocity, ordinary evil and Hannah Arendt , 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mass atrocity, ordinary evil and Hannah Arendt : criminal consciousness in Argentina's dirty war / Osiel, Mark J., viii, 257 p.. - New Haven : Yale U. P. , 2001. ISBN 0-300-08753-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Dirty war and democratic response. 2. Ordinary atrocity: the mind of administrative massacre. 3. Extraordinary atrocity. 4. Religious reassurance. 5. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
URL http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300087536 |
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4. | Barnhoorn, L.A.M.N. (managing editor) : Netherlands yearbook of international law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Netherlands yearbook of international law : vol. XL : 2009 / Barnhoorn, L.A.M.N. (managing editor), x, 538 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser, 2010. - ISSN 0167-6788 ISBN 978-90-6704-310-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I. Articles:. 1. Why criminal culpability should follow the critical path: reframing the theory of 'effective control', by Michael A. Newton and Casey Kuhlman. 2. International dimensions of the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles, by Arjen van Rijn. 3. The continental shelf in the Polar regions: cold war or triumph of law, by Alex G. Oude Elferink. 4. Interaction between EU law and international law in the light of Intertanko and Kadi: the dilemma of norms binding the member states but not the Community, by Jan Willem van Rossem. PART II. Documentation: 5. Classification scheme; 6. Netherlands state practice for the parliamentary year 2007–2008, by P. C. Tange. 7. Treaties and other international agreements to which the Kingdom of the Netherlands is a party - conclusions and developments 2008, by M. A. van der Harst. 8. Netherlands municipal legislation involving questions of public international law, 2008, by P. C. Tange. 9. Netherlands judicial decisions involving questions of public international law, 2007–2008, by L. A. N. M. Barnhoorn. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Albania / Algeria / Australia / Austria / Bangladesh / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Bulgaria / burma / Chad / Chile / China / Colombia / Congo / Croatia / Denmark / Ecuador / Egypt / France / Georgia / Germany / Ghana / Greece / Iran / Iraq / Italy / Jordan / Kyrgyzstan / Luxembourg / Macedonia / Mexico / Montenegro / Netherlands / New Zealand / Norway / Paraguay / Romania / Russian Federation / Serbia / Slovenia / Somalia / South Africa / Spain / Sudan / Surinam / Switzerland / Tanzania / Tibet / Tunisia / United Kingdom / USA / Yugoslavia / Zambia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; CRC-OP; Convention on the prevention of terrorism; CEDAW; EU charter of fundamental rights; European convention on action against trafficking in human beings; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; |
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5. | Bassiouni, M. Cherif : Crimes against humanity, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Crimes against humanity : historical evolution and contemporary application / Bassiouni, M. Cherif, xxxvii, 845 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-1-107-00115-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Legal nature. 2. Phenomenological considerations. 3. Emergence in positive international law. 4. Post-charter developments. 5. The principles of legality in the London charter and post-charter developments. 6. Specific contents. 7. Ratione personae and elements of criminal responsibility. 8. Defenses and exonerations. 9. A survey of national legislation and prosecutions for international crimes and crimes against humanity. 10. Concluding assessment. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Hague conventions; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ECHR; ICC statute; ICCPR; ICTR statute; Nuremberg charter; OAU convention for the elimination of mercenaries in Africa; Tokyo charter; CAT; UDHR; CEDAW; Refugee convention; London charter; |
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6. | Crowe, Jonathan : Principles of international humanitarian law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Principles of international humanitarian law / Crowe, Jonathan ; Weston-Scheuber, Kylie, viii, 198 p.. - Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar, 2013. ISBN 978-1-78100-272-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The concept of armed conflict. 2. Sources of international humanitarian law. 3. Means and methods of warfare. 4. Protection of civilians. 5. Protection of combatants hors de combat. 6. Humanitarianism and human rights. 7. Liability of states and non-state groups. 8. Liability of individuals. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Hague conventions |
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7. | Dubber, Markus D. (ed.) : The Oxford handbook of criminal law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Oxford handbook of criminal law / Dubber, Markus D. (ed.) ; Hörnle, Tatjana (ed.), 1203 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-967359-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Mariana Valverde and Pat O'Malley: Criminology. 2. Bennett Capers: Critical race theory. 3. Talia Fisher: Economic analysis of criminal law. 4. Prabha Kotiswaran: Feminist approaches to criminal law. 5. James Q. Whitman: The transition to modernity. 6. Simon Stern: Law and literature. 7. Leo Zaibert: Philosophy. 8. Galia Schneebaum and Shai J. Lavi: Criminal law and sociology. 9. Mireille Hildebrandt: Criminal law and technology in a data-driven society. 10. Heikki Pihlajamäki and Mia Korpiola: Medieval canon law: the origins of modern criminal law. 11. Val Napoleon and Hadley Friedland: Indigenous legal traditions: roots to renaissance. 12. Silvia Tellenbach: Islamic criminal law. 13. Arnold Enker: Jewish law. 14. Stephen C. Thaman: Marxist and Soviet law. 15. Rain Liivoja: Military justice. 16. Emmanuel Melissaris: Theories of crime and punishment. 17. Lidsay Farmer: Codification. 18. Alejandro Chehtman: Jurisdiction. 19. Benjamin I. Berger: Constitutional principles. 20. Vincent Chiao: Acts and actus reus. 21. Carl-Friedrich Stuckenberg: Causation. 22. Thomas Weigend: Subjective elements of criminal liability. 23. Michael T. Cahill: Inchoate crimes. 24. James G. Stewart: Complicity. 25. Susanne Beck: Corporate criminal liability. 26. Ulfrid Neumann: Necessity/duress. 27. Victoria Nourse: Self-defense. 28. Vera Bergelson: The defense of consent. 29. Christoph Safferling: Insanity and intoxication. 30. Tatjana Hörnle: Theories of criminalization. 31. Guyora Binder: Homicide. 32. James Chalmers: Offences against the person. 33. Vanessa E. Munro: Sexual autonomy. 34. Stuart P. Green: Property offenses. 35. Beatrice Brunhöber: Drug offenses. 36. Kent Roach: Terrorism. 37. Samuel W. Buell: "White collar" crime. 38. Darryl K. Brown: Public welfare offenses. 39. Máximo Langer: The long shadow of the adversial and inquisitorial categories. 40. Frank Meyer: Discretion. 41. Nora V. Demleitner: Types of punishment. 42. Erik Luna: Sentencing. 43. Dirk van Zyl Smit: Prison law. 44. Markus D. Dubber: Paradigms of penal law. 45. Alon Harel: Public and private law. 46. Daniel Ohana: Regulatory offenses and administrative sanctions between criminal and administrative law. 47. Luis E. Chiesa: Comparative criminal law. 48. Kimmo Nuotio: European criminal law. 49. Elies van Sliedregt: International criminal law. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |