The United Nations Convention Against Corruption
Author: Edited by Cecily Rose, Michael Kubiciel, and Oliver Landwehr
ISBN: 9780198803959
Binding: Hardcover
Publication Date: 24 March 2019
Price: $210.00
The United Nations Convention against Corruption includes 71 articles, and takes a notably comprehensive approach to the problem of corruption, as it addresses prevention, criminalization, international cooperation, and asset recovery. Since it came into force more than a decade ago, the Convention has attracted nearly universal participation by states. As a global and comprehensive convention, which establishes new rules in several areas of anti-corruption law and helps shape domestic laws and policies around the world, this treaty calls for scholarly study.
This volume helps to fill a gap in existing academic literature by providing an invaluable reference work on the Convention. It provides systematic coverage of the treaty, with each chapter discussing the relevant travaux preparatoires, the text of the final article, comparisons with other anti-corruption treaties, and available information about domestic implementing legislation and enforcement.
This commentary is designed to serve as a reference work for academics, lawyers, and policy-makers working in the anti-corruption field, and in the fields of transnational criminal law and domestic criminal law. Contributors include anti-corruption experts, scholars, and legal practitioners from around the globe.
Cecily Rose, Assistant Professor, Leiden University, Michael Kubiciel, Professor of Criminal Law, Criminal Law Theory and Comparative Law, University of Cologne, Oliver Landwehr, Legal Officer, The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
Cecily
Rose is an assistant professor of public international law at the
Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden University.
Before joining the Grotius Centre she worked as an associate legal
officer at the International Court of Justice and the Special Court for
Sierra Leone, and in private practice. She holds a LL.M. and Ph.D. from
the University of Cambridge, a J.D. from Columbia Law School, and B.A.
(English) from Yale.
Michael Kubiciel is a professor of criminal
law, criminal law theory and comparative law and the executive director
of the Institute for Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure at the
University of Cologne/Germany. His main fields of work are
fraud/corruption and the internationalization of criminal law. In the
last ten years he has acted as a consultant for several international
organizations regarding anti-corruption policies, written several
book-chapters, articles and a book in that field and has contributed to
the official Technical Guide to UNCAC and the EU Anti-Corruption Report.
Before joining the law faculty in Cologne, Kubiciel worked as an
assistant professor at the University of Regensburg, as senior
researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International
Criminal Law and as associate in the Dusseldorf office of Wessing
Rechtsanwalte.
Oliver Landwehr is a legal officer at the
Corruption and Economic Crime Branch of the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Vienna. He mainly works on the evaluation of
national anti-corruption legislation in the framework of the
Implementation Review Mechanism of the United Nations Convention against
Corruption (UNCAC). Prior to coming to UNODC, he worked as a referendaire
(law clerk) in the chambers of two judges at the General Court of the
EU, as a lecturer at King’s College London School of Law and in private
practice in an international law firm.
Julio Bacio-Terracino (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development)
Neil Boister (University of Waikato)
Jean Pierre Brun (World Bank)
Indira Carr (University of Surrey)
David Chaikin (University of Sydney Business School)
Dimosthenis Chrysikos (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime)
Badr El Banna (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime)
Philip
Fitzgerald (Contributing editor of the FCPA blog; doctoral thesis on
‘The International Normative Framework for Combating the Corruption of
Foreign Public Officials’)
Friederycke Haijer (PhD Candidate, Utrecht University)
David Hess (University of Michigan Ross School of Business)
Elisa Hoven (University of Cologne)
Radha Ivory (University of Queensland)
Guillermo Jorge (San Andres University)
Aloysius Llamzon (King & Spalding)
Abiola Makinwa (Hague University of Applied Sciences)
Yseult Marique (University of Essex)
Olaf Meyer (Centre of European Law and Politics, Bremen University)
Philip Nichols (Wharton Business School, University of Pennsylvania)
Pinar Olcer (Leiden University)
Cedric Ryngaert (Utrecht University)
Christian Tams (Professor, University of Glasgow)
Philippa Webb (King’s College London)
[via International Law]
Esta entrada fue modificada por última vez en 03/04/2019 18:27
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