1st Edition

The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court A Challenge to Impunity

By Mauro Politi, Giuseppe Nesi Copyright 2001
    342 Pages
    by Routledge

    340 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book focuses on the Statute of the International Criminal Court, gathering contributions by leading scholars and diplomats. It examines the main features of the Statute, highlighting its strengths and weaknesses, the role of the ICC in the international protection of human rights and the impact of the ICC Statute on the international criminal justice system. It also offers an evaluation of the prospect for the functioning of the ICC in the future.

    Contents: The International Criminal Court: Its Main Features: Some reflections on the Rome conference, Giovanni Conso; The Rome statute of the ICC: rays of light and some shadows, Mauro Politi; The experience of the preparatory committee, Adriaan Bos; The international criminal court in perspective: from the Rome conference to the years to come, John T. Holmes; International criminal court: the role of the security council, Elizabeth Wilmshurst; The role of the security council and the independence of the international criminal court: some reflections, Nabil Elaraby; The Rome statute of the international criminal court: expectations of the jurisdiction, Mahnoush H. Arsanjani; The role of the prosecutor, Silvia A. Fernandez De Gurmendi; The international criminal court: jurisdiction, trigger mechanism and relationship to national jurisdictions, Hans-Peter Kaul. The International Criminal Court and the International Protection of Human Rights: Introductory remarks, Theodor Meron; The Rome statute of the international criminal court and human rights, Fausto Pocar; Crimes against humanity and the Rome statute of the international criminal court, Roger S. Clark; War crimes in international armed conflicts, Gabriella Venturini; War crimes and internal conflicts in the statute of the international criminal court, Luigi Condorelli; The protection of children’s rights in the statute of the international criminal court, John T. Holmes; The status of the individual in the statute of the international criminal court, Lamia Mekhemar; State’s crime and individuals’ crimes: what relationship?, Giorgio Conetti. The International Criminal Justice System After the Rome Conference: The preventive and the repressive function of the international criminal court, Otto Triffterer; The international criminal court and national jurisdictions, Flavia Lattanzi; Follow up to Rome: preparing for entry into force of the statute of the international criminal court, William A. Schabas; Curr

    Biography

    Mauro Politi

    '...it represents, in a concise and convenient format, the contemporaneous thinking of some key participants and observers of the 1998 Rome Conference.' The Law and Politics Book Review 'The book is easily accessible through its clear and systematic structure of the different papers...the book is unique in the sense that it has been written by those who have been directly involved with the implementation of the ICC, and it is a very pragmatic approach to the underlying problems of the Statute. In sum, the book provides the reader with a lot of factual information about the preparation phase and the Rome conference, and it also contains a wealth of critical ideas.' German Yearbook of International Law ’...a useful collection of short analyses of topics related to the ICC.’ Netherlands International Law Review '...a good book for the identification of the character of the system of international criminal law within the law of the ICC.' Contemporary Journal of International Criminal Law